Working with Men and Boys to Prevent Gender-Based Violence
Author: Womens UN Report Network
Date: December 4, 2006
the click provided.
Working with Men and Boys to Prevent Gender-Based
Violence
- This web site is a comprehensive tool kit designed to help you work with
men and boys to prevent gender-based violence. It provides readings, case
studies, handouts, exercises, and other resources as well as
community-building tools.
Recommended Work Plan
- This 10-lesson work plan is a suggested sequence for exploring and
discussing the themes in this tool kit. You may undertake these lessons alone
or with a group, and you may set your own pace.
Please share your insights and experiences throughout the learning process by
posting your thoughts, questions, and reactions on the Discussion Board.
Lesson
1: Introductory Reading: Men, Masculinities, and Violence
Lesson
2: Discussion: Why Work with Men & Boys
Lesson
3: Applying a Comprehensive Approach
Lesson
4: Examples: Good Practices and Programs
Lesson
5: Active Roles: What Men and Boys Can Do
Lesson
6: Work with Young Men
Lesson
7: Work with Schools
Lesson
8: Cross-Cultural Solidarity
Lesson
9: Readings: Build Partnerships
Lesson
10: Organizational Exercise: Build Partnerships
Lesson 1: Introductory Reading: Men, Masculinities, and Violence
These short readings will help you understand key issues related to men,
gender, and violence. The readings cover the concept of masculinity and the
relationships between masculine messages, socialization processes, and men’s
violence.
1. Read and discuss the following articles:
“The Seven P’s of Men’s
Violence” by Michael Kaufman.
This article examines the root
causes of men’s violence (such as patriarchy, privilege, and past experience)
and helps construct a holistic picture of the factors behind violence.
Refusing to “Be a Man!” by Steven Botkin
This
article explores some of pressures and consequences of the repeated societal
message to “be a man” and proposes an alternative vision for men.
“Men, Masculinity, and Violence” by James Lang
This
speech, presented at the 2002 International Conference on Eradicating Violence
against Women and Girls in Berlin, outlines connections between men,
masculinity, and violence and argues for greater involvement of men in
antiviolence work.
“On Men and Violence” by Robert Connell.
This
article sets the stage for understanding men’s socialization and its
relationship to men’s violence.
Reflection Questions:
- What are masculinities? How is understanding the concept of masculinities
useful for designing work with men and boys on preventing gender-based
violence? - What are some of the socialization processes for shaping boys into men
that may encourage men to use violence or sanction the use of violence? - What are some of the costs to men of conforming to dominant masculine
roles?
2. Do the exercise Act
like a Man.
Go to the Discussion
Board to share your thoughts on, reactions to, and experiences of the
connections between men, masculinities, and violence.
Further Reading
“Men, Masculinities and Development: Broadening Our Work Towards
Gender Equality” by Alan Greig, Michael Kimmel, and James Lang
(2000).
This discussion of the meanings and uses of masculinities describes
the implications for social services provision and development.
“Pain Explodes in a World of Power: Men’s
Violence,” Chapter 7 of the book Cracking the Armour: Power,
Pain, and the Lives of Men by Michael Kaufman.
This chapter explores key
factors behind violence—men’s contradictory experiences of power and the pain
related to dominant masculine norms.
“Men, Masculinity, and Violence” by Michael
Flood.
This speech argues that the links between men and violence are social
and cultural, not biological. He explains why he and other men are taking action
against men’s violence, and the everyday steps that men can take to help end
it.
“Understanding Men: Gender Sociology and the New International
Research on Masculinities” by Robert Connell.
This paper surveys
recent academic work on masculinities and summarizes common elements and useful
conclusions from this varied literature.
Lesson 2: Discussion: Why Work with Men & Boys?
This section explores some of the compelling reasons to work with men and
boys to prevent violence as well as some of the challenges to doing that work.
Discussing the reflection questions will help you and your colleagues think
about what might motivate men and boys to get involved in violence prevention
and how you can talk with them about it.
1. Read and discuss Top
10 Reasons for Working with Men and Boys.
Reflection Questions:
- Why is it so important to work with men and boys on violence prevention
now? - What are the most important reasons for working with men and boys? What
reasons are the most important to you, and why? - What in your personal and professional experience has led you to believe
we need to work with men and boys to prevent violence? - How will working with men and boys contribute to your personal or
organizational goal of ending gender-based violence?
2. Read and discuss Making the Case to Men & Boys.
Reflection Questions:
- Do you expect men to play a role in preventing violence against women
without any benefit to themselves? Why or why not? - What are some of the benefits of ending violence for men?
Role Play: It’s Not My Business
This exercise helps you to look more closely at motivating men and boys to
get involved. It uses role playing to develop skills and talking points to
motivate men who are reluctant or resistant.
Use this exercise in a group setting to explore participants’ understanding
of and attitudes about men’s motivations for getting involved in preventing
gender-based violence.
- Break the group into groups of four participants.
- In each foursome, ask one person to play the Male Motivator and one person
to play the Male Resistor; the other two members are Observers. Please note
that women can play men. - Give the Motivators a copy of the talking points “Making the case to men
and boys” - Ask the Motivators to read the list, and explain that their task is to
persuade the Resistors to get involved in violence prevention. Ask the
Resistors to think of reasons why it is not their business to get involved. - Tell the Motivator and Resistor in each group to begin the role play.
Allow it to run for several minutes. Stop, and ask the Observers to give
feedback to the Motivators on how well they did. - Swap roles in each group, with the two Observers becoming the Motivator
and the Resistor, and repeat steps 2 – 4. - Bring everyone back together as one group and sum up the talking points
that are most effective for motivating men and boys to prevent violence.
4. Read and discuss Countering Objections.
Reflection Questions:
Use these questions to help you and your colleagues think about and counter
the concerns that people may have about working with men and boys to prevent
violence.
- What personal assumptions and attitudes about men do you have that might
challenge the work you do with them? - What challenges to working with men and boys do you think you will face in
your own community? - What might you do to overcome these challenges?
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts, reactions, and
experiences.
Lesson 3: Apply a Comprehensive Approach
Men’s violence has a number of underlying causes, and understanding these
causes and how they interact at various social levels is a first step toward
prevention. This approach, known as the social ecology model, is also useful for
exploring different types of prevention responses and how they are connected.
The discussion questions below will help you understand the causes of
gender-based violence in social environments.
1. Read and discuss A Comprehensive Approach.
Reflection Questions:
- What are the most important factors underlying gender-based violence? Why?
- How are these factors related to one another?
- Are there other factors that are not outlined in the social ecology model?
Go to the Discussion
Board to share your thoughts, reactions, and experiences related to taking a
comprehensive approach and using the social ecology model.
Lesson 4: Good Practices and Program Examples
This lesson explores different types of initiatives for working with men and
boys and the good practices common to this work. One aim of this lesson is to
illustrate the necessity of a cohesive, comprehensive prevention plan that
provides entry points for working with men and boys at various levels of the
social ecology.
1. Read and discuss Good Practices.
Reflection Questions:
- Do these good practices reflect the type of work you do or plan to do?
- Which of these practices will be the most difficult for your organization
to implement? Which will be the easiest? - Based on your experience, are there other practices you would add to this
list?
2. Discuss Apply a Comprehensive Approach
in light of good
practices for violence prevention.
Reflection Questions:
- What types of violence prevention initiatives for men and boys are you
familiar with? - Where do they fit in the social ecology model?
- How are these initiatives related to work at other levels of the social
ecology? Do they reinforce one another? If not, how can they be made more
cohesive?
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts about using the
social ecology model to develop a comprehensive approach to working with men and
boys.
Further Reading
“A Coordinated Collaborative Approach to Address and Combat Teen
Dating Abuse” by Rus Ervin Funk
This paper looks at how and
why teens are overlooked and underserved in violence prevention efforts, and
provides a real-life example of how to reach teens in abusive relationships
though coordinated community response initiatives in the legal, intervention,
service delivery, education, and prevention arenas.
“Violence Against Women: An Integrated, Ecological Framework,” Violence
Against Women, 4(3); by Lori Heise (1998). (Not available online)
This
article gives a thorough account of factors at different levels of society that
are related to violence against women.
The Initiative for Violence-Free Families and Communities in Ramsey County,
Minnesota: Fourteen Years of Innovative Strategies to Prevent Family
Violence by Donald Gault
This case study describes the spectrum of
prevention programs initiated in one U.S. county.
“Promoting Collaboration within State Government to Prevent
Domestic and Sexual Violence: Prevention Institute” by Shailushi
Baxi, Rachel Davis, and Larry Cohen
This case study illustrates that
partnership with different levels of government is a crucial part of a
comprehensive approach.
Lesson 5: What Men and Boys Can Do: Active Roles
This lesson focuses on developing prevention initiatives based on roles and
responsibilities for men and boys. These roles range from changes in men’s own
behaviors to confronting violent and sexist behaviors in others to serving as
role models and working for change.
1. Read and discuss What Men & Boys Can Do.
Reflection Questions:
- What are some ways we can encourage young and adult men to reflect upon
their own behaviors and attitudes? - How would you respond if you asked a male friend to get involved in an
initiative to prevent gender-based violence and he said, “This isn’t my
problem?” - How does a man’s peer culture affect whether he speaks out about sexism
and men’s violence toward women? - What are the qualities of a good ally? What makes it hard for men to be
good allies in ending gender-based violence?
Further Reading
“Political Connections: Men, Gender and Violence” by
Alan Greig
This paper discusses the politics of men’s roles and
responsibilities in efforts to end gender-based violence. Ending violence is
more than a matter of individual men changing their behavior; it also requires
political action to challenge the systems that reinforce and promote
violence.
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts on and
experiences of the roles and responsibilities of men and boys in preventing
gender-based violence.
Lesson 6: Work with Young Men
This overview covers why working with young men is crucial, presents good
practices for this work, and provides exercises used by different prevention
groups that work with young men.
1. Read and discuss the entire section Work with Young Men.
2. Reflection Questions:
- In what ways do you see young men as a problem, dangerous, difficult, or
prone to violence? - What messages do boys get about “being a man” in your community or
neighborhood? - Where are the best places in your community or neighborhood to meet young
men and engage them in this work? - How could you start talking with young men in order to engage them?
3. Review these exercises:
Continuum of Harm to Women (Men Can Stop Rape)
Seeing Violence Against A Woman. (Oakland Men’s
Project)
Risk and Violence: Tests of Courage (Instituto
Promundo)
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts, reactions, and
experiences.
Further Reading
Guy to
Guy Project case study, Instituto Promundo, Brazil
This
case study of a peer training and social marketing project outlines reasons to
work with young men on violence prevention and reproductive health, and relates
some of the good practices the project has developed over the years.
The Social Norms Approach to Violence Prevention by
Alan Berkowitz
Research on social norms suggests that most young men are
mistaken about other young men’s attitudes and behaviors. In fact, most males
are uncomfortable with violence against women and with the attitudes, behaviors,
and language of men who commit such violence. But young men do not act on their
beliefs or express their discomfort because they falsely think that other men do
not feel the same.
Lesson 7: Work Through Schools
This lesson covers opportunities and good practices for working with young
men through schools for violence prevention.
1. Read and discuss Work Through Schools
2. Reflection Questions:
- Do you see schools as a positive and safe environment for youth?
- What do you see as some of the greatest challenges to working through
schools? - What are some possibilities for overcoming these challenges?
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts on and
experiences of working with young men through schools to prevent violence.
Further Reading
Young Men as Allies in Preventing Violence and Abuse: Building
Effective Partnerships with Schools (FVPF-BPI)
This overview
paper, which was part of the Family Violence Prevention Fund’s online discussion
series, addresses the pros and cons of working through schools.
Thames Valley District School Board
This case study
describes various prevention programs instituted in the Thames Valley School
District in Ontario, Canada.
Expect Respect: A School-Based Program Promoting Safe and Healthy
Relationships for Youth
The Expect Respect program at SafePlace in
Austin, Texas, has been providing school-based services since 1988 in response
to requests from school counselors seeking support for girls in abusive dating
relationships.
Safe Communities ~ Safe Schools Center for the
Study and Prevention of Violence
The Safe Communities ~ Safe Schools model
helps schools design a safe-school plan. The goal of this model is to create and
maintain a positive and welcoming school climate—one free of drugs, violence,
intimidation, and fear—that the community strongly supports.
Men Can Stop Rape’s MOST Clubs (Men of Strength
Clubs)
See Men Can Stop Rape’s Web site to read more about the group’s work
with schools in Washington, D.C.
Lesson 8: Cross-Cultural Solidarity
This lesson will help organizations and individuals orient themselves in
solidarity with organizations and individuals from other social, cultural, and
ethnic groups. It lays out a seven-step process that will help you understand
the imbalance of power between different races, ethnicities, and social groups;
recognize oppression; and become aware of your own culture and forms of
privilege. It emphasizes that culture can be an asset in violence prevention
efforts, and that solidarity is based on common humanity—not unequal
positions.
1. Read and do the exercises in Cross-Cultural Solidarity.
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts, reactions, and
experiences related to working toward cross-cultural solidarity.
Further Reading
Beyond Cultural Competence by Juan Carlos Areán
In
this short article, Areán argues that advocates shift their focus from cultural
competence to cultural solidarity. Cultural solidarity is the ability to
effectively operate in different cultural contexts through “the comprehension of
the unique experiences of members from a different culture through awareness of
one’s own culture, empathic understanding of oppression and critical assessment
of one’s own privilege.”
“Next Steps in Diversity” by Paul Kivel
In
this short article, Kivel outlines some of the important steps to prepare for
and undertake diversity work.
Lesson 9: Building Partnerships
Building violence-prevention alliances with other organizations will create
stronger coalitions for advocacy and policy change, strengthen skills within
your organization, and help to establish a rational division of labor across
levels and sectors while avoiding duplication of efforts. These partnerships,
however, do not come without compromises and internal reflection within
organizations. This lesson explores the benefits and challenges of institutional
partnerships.
1. Read and discuss Build
Partnerships (Overview, Organizational Alliances, and Workplace
Partnerships).
2. Reflection Questions:
- What in your personal and professional experience has led you to believe
we need to work with a more diverse spectrum of organizations? - How will broader alliances contribute to the goal of ending gender-based
violence? - What in your personal and professional experience has highlighted the
difficulties of men and women working together for violence prevention? - What are some ways to overcome the challenges to building new
partnerships? How can we move forward?
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts, reactions, and
experiences related to building partnerships.
Further Reading
“Building a ‘Big Tent’ Approach to Ending Men’s
Violence” by Jackson Katz
This paper explores the potential of the
growing “big tent” approach to ending men’s violence and envisions what it might
accomplish. It argues for expanding prevention work and gives examples of how we
can begin to engage more individuals and organizations with a large male
membership.
Faith-based Communities, a case study by Rev. Marie
Fortune, the Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic
Violence
Faith-based organizations are a crucial ally in prevention efforts.
Millions of men across the nation participate in faith-based communities whose
leaders, often male, typically enjoy significant moral authority and shape in
important ways the values and behavior of the men in their congregations.
Joint Labor and Management Domestic Violence Awareness
Program, a case study by KC Wagner
Organizations including the
Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW), AFSCME Women’s Rights Division, and the
Family Violence Prevention Fund have placed domestic violence on the union
agenda. Recently, organizations such as the New York Labor Coalition Against
Domestic Violence have begun to explore prevention activities that reach out to
men.
Lesson 10: Building Partnerships, Part 2
This lesson is for organizations that want to build new alliances in order to
increase the reach and effectiveness of their violence prevention work. You
should complete Lesson 9 before proceeding.
1. Do the exercise Expanding Alliances,
Go to the Discussion Board to share your thoughts, reactions, and
experiences related to the expanding alliances exercise.
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