While we had the 5 day working Seminar in Porto we videorecorded some of our discussions. We would like to share some highlights and interesting thoughts with you to give you a little insight into our work:
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Working Seminar in Porto - A major milestone
CEINAV Porto 5 Days Seminar, 28th Sept—4th Oct 2014
From September 28 to October 4, researchers of the Project CEINAV met in FPCEUP, University of Porto, to share preliminary findings of the 1st stream of the research.
Based on a total of 24 workshops with professionals, the five partners wrote working papers on the intervention patterns and approaches to the different forms of violence in each country. These papers will be revised after the discussions in Porto and then made public online.
With an intense and productive work, the team reviewed similarities and specificities among the four countries concerning intervention in domestic violence, child physical abuse and neglect, and trafficking of human beings for sexual exploitation. The debates focused sequences of intervention in different countries, the interpretative frames of the legal and professional practices, and cultural premises that configure the relationship between professionals and survivors in each country.
Public Presentation of CEINAV - October 1, 2014
- Prof. Doutora Liz Kelly, coordinator of research team in UK, researcher in London Metropolitan University
- Prof. António Magalhães, vice-president of Scientific Board of FPCEUP
- Prof. Fátima Machado, vice-rectoress of University of Porto
- Prof. Emeritus Carol Hagemann-White, Project Leader CEINAV, and researcher in Department of Educational and Cultural Studies, University of Osnabruck, Germany
- Prof. Vlasta Jalusic, coordinator of the Slovenian team and researcher in Peace Institut de Ljubliana Eslovénia
- Thomas Meysen, coordinator of the research team of Heidelberg, researcher in German Institute for Youth and Human Sciences
from left to right in the picture:
Meeting with Associate Partners, October 1 and 2, 2014
The 5 Days
Seminar included a Meeting with the Associate partners, held on the 1st
and 2nd of October, with representatives from Black Association of
Women Step Out Ltd. (BAWSO), Cardiff, Wales; IMKAAN, London, England;
Association for Non Violent Communication, Ljubljana; Society KLJUC –
Centre for fight against trafficking in human beings, Ljubljana;
Association against sexual abuse, Ljubljana Slovenia; IGFH -
Internationale Gesellschaft für erzieherische Hilfen (Federation of
Educative Communities), Germany; Federation of Women’s Counselling
Centres and Hotlines (bff), Germany; Associação Projeto Criar –
Association against child abuse, from Porto, Portugal, and
UMAR-Association of Women, Alternative and Answer, from Portugal.
In
the meeting, researchers and representatives of the APs debated the
preliminary results of the first stream of the research, especially with
regard to ethical issues that could be explored further, and their
implications for next streams, in the pathway to understand the cultural
premises in intervention.
Future directions of fruitful
cooperation were built having in mind the artistic process that will go
parallel with the next streams of the CEINAV research.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Research progressing on time
This week CEINAV is completing almost all of 24 workshops with practitioners in the four countries, a major step
forward in the empirical work of our project! Only two workshops had to be
re-scheduled for early September. Central aim of the workshops was to explore how
decisions are made in difficult situations, and to look at the
dilemmas that arise in practice, when conflicting rights, needs or mandates
appear. The workshops were very successful, and the participants were
enthusiastic about the opportunity to reflect in more depth and in dialogue
with other professions on how they deal with the challenges of addressing
violence.
The workshops were designed to
follow a common structure in all four countries and across the three areas of
violence, with open-ended focal-group methodology then allowing the diversity
arising from the country context and the differences between frameworks of
intervention for domestic violence, trafficking, and child protection to come
to the fore.
Through
meetings and conversations with the associate partners and among the five
research teams, we defined a list of the main areas of practice for each of the
three forms of violence, identifying which professionals could have experience
in recognizing situations of violence and initiating intervention. Participants
were sought who would not work together on a daily basis, often coming from
different towns or districts.
Detailed
guidelines for the agreed procedure were written, suggesting key ethical dilemmas that may lie
beneath the surface of discussions. Drawing on the expertise of cooperating practitioners as well as on
research knowledge, a basic narrative for a paradigmatic case study was
developed. It begins before intervention when the signs and signals for
possible violence are not yet clear for any professional, and then continues in
two stages of probable contact with agencies and indications of more serious
harm. In the interest of comparability, six core questions were also formulated
that were asked in the same way in all workshops. In the course of two half-day
sessions, there was plenty of time to pursue issues and differences important
to the participants.
The agreed
set of core questions and the agreed narrative arc in all the stories
comprising three sequences provided the scaffolding upon which we could hang
the tapestry of our diversity. The next step in our work will be to analyse the
workshops “two by two”, in order to write a working paper on the shape and
patterns of intervention and its dilemmas for each form of violence within the
context of each country. These 12 papers will be the material for a working
seminar with all partners and all associate partners in the fall.
Monday, July 7, 2014
Iterview with Manuel Albano, rapporteur for Human Trafficking in Portugal
For the CEINAV project the portuguese team conducted an interview with Manuel Albano, rapporteur for human trafficking in Portugal.
The following is an extract from the interview, read the full Interview here.
CEINAV: Dr. Manuel Albano, can you identify the diverse tendencies that concern Human Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation?
MA: There are tendencies - note that these are not European tendencies, but mostly national tendencies - that try to push this issue away from the area of equality, because they consider that this is a criminal problematic, not a gender equality issue. This is against the Palermo Protocol, which clearly states that the focus must be given to equality issues, to gender issues. That means that trafficking must be viewed and worked on from a gender perspective.
Therefore, it’s important to realize that the problematic and the gender view for this doesn’t have anything to do with any theorization. It has to do, objectively, with the main target affected, which are still women. The number of men and children trafficked has also increased, due to trafficking for labour exploitation purposes, such as mendacity. When we work with victims, female and male, we understand that the dynamics are completely different. In other words, a man, when he’s found in this situation, mostly wants to quickly return to his home place. He’s not very concerned with the support that may exist here, what he wants is to go out, to be free, to return back home. A woman has completely different characteristics: she appeals for a more specific support, a more continuous and differentiated help on this level.
The 1st National Plan against Human Trafficking came out from the experience of the Project CAIM. We presented the first draft. We also managed to have the discernment to call someone from the outside, Dr. Fernanda Rodrigues, the project consultant. There were hours and hours, days and days of discussion, in order to achieve something, so we could have the guideline we now have, to establish all those dynamics. This was a process down to top. That’s why people, a lot of them, identified themselves with all the created instruments, because they built them. It wasn’t a process that someone imposed, no, people identified with it. I’d say that, in Portugal, this project is striking and makes a difference in this area, fully; I have no doubt about it.
An example of that was the documentary sponsored by CIG, at the end of last year: it was something that made people think and reflect about this. People talked about these issues in day-by-day situations.
Monday, May 5, 2014
CEINAV on the ENGV conference and meeting the president
Four members of the CEINAV team attended the European
Network on Gender and Violence Conference in Malta April 21st-23rd, attended by 100 people. The network provides a supportive and expert
space for established and new scholars to present their work. We discussed papers from many perspectives and
national contexts and Liz Kelly from CEINAV gave one of the keynotes on approaches
to prevention, drawing on a conceptual framework from a previous EU project
some of the partners had worked on together.
This framework suggests prevention efforts need to be more strongly
theorised, targeting specific pathways that connect the structural, normative
and biographical. After the meeting
Carol Hagemann White, the Director of our HERA project met the recently
appointed president of Malta who has a personal interest in our topic.
Liz Kelly
Liz Kelly
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
"Data" is the hot topic around violence against women these days
On March 6, the EU Fundamental Rights Agency presented their
EU-wide prevalence survey to an audience of an estimated 400 in Brussels, very
many of whom represented governments, NGOs, international organisations. I was
astonished how many speakers in this well-informed public declared themselves
“shocked” by the findings, since the new prevalence figures are not very
different from what national surveys have uncovered. Or were they hoping to
shock their governments into finally taking the problem seriously?
Just two weeks later, the European Institute
for Gender Equality invited some 50 experts from across the EU to discuss the
results of their study on the availability of administrative data on violence
against women. Unsurprisingly, since institutions and regulations differ quite
a lot among member states, not much of the data is comparable across countries,
and of course administrative files only capture violence that is reported to
the police, social services, or (much less often) the health care system. As
the FRA study showed, less than a third of all victimized women reported even
the most serious incident to the police or to some other agency or
organization. (A third talked to someone they know, a third had told no-one about
it.).
What do we need the data for?
The interesting thing would be data that told us what statutory agencies DO
about the cases they do hear of, for example, what percentage of cases recorded
by the police ever goes to court?
In its “victims rights“ Directive (October
2012), the EU – to my great satisfaction – finally defined a victim as someone
who has suffered harm irrespective of whether a perpetrator has been
identified, charged or convicted, or of whether she makes a criminal complaint.
Finally EU policy steps out of the narrow box in which the right to support and
protection depends on criminal proceedings.
But only one step. The Commission takes care to
ask member states to train the providers of specialist support services to encourage
and facilitate reporting to the police. Services, it seems, are expected to
teach victims to trust the police and the criminal justice system. Indeed, we
would all like to live in a world like that, and in many countries, the police
are making impressive efforts to be worthy of victims’ trust. But it is the
mandate of support services, would it even be ethical of them, to try and
convince reluctant women to denounce their husbands or partners to the police?
In how many states can a rape crisis center honestly assure women that they
have nothing to fear from being witness in a rape trial? About a year ago, when
a prominent rape case was being dragged through the German media, a former
national prosecutor declared, in a talk show, that if his daughter were raped,
he would strongly advise her not to
go to the police, because the defense would inevitably attack her credibility
and her character. Yes, when a woman has decided that she wants redress, wants
to see her tormenter prosecuted, support her by all means – but encourage?
Do more data make better policy?
But back to data. There seems to be a notion floating
around that the modern state ought to be informed about every case or incident
of abuse or hurt. Every victim of violence in close relationships, it is said,
ought to be “assessed” to decide if she needs special protection measures. (Why
is no-one talking about the perpetrator? Surely it is the person posing a
danger who needs to be assessed.). In the same Directive, member states are
asked to provide administrative data regularly, systematically, and in
comparable frameworks. It’s not easy to see what this has to do with victims’
rights.
Do more data make better policy? How, exactly,
does that work? Awareness-raising is likely to increase the proportion of
incidents that are reported, poor agency responses are likely to decrease that
proportion, but the numbers won’t tell us whether awareness has risen or
whether the agency responses have improved or deteriorated.
I’m finding the “hype” about data, and more
data questionable, especially since the data are all being collected from the
victims, and that is, we might remind ourselves, a very intrusive process. If my
handbag is stolen on the train, of course I go to the police (if only because I
need the file number to get all those plastic cards we live with replaced), and
their questions center on the perpetrator. I don’t have to answer questions
about whether I am feeling depressed or whether I am pregnant.
Seems to me that any institution that wishes to
collect data on people who have done nothing wrong, just had the bad luck to be
victimized, should be required to justify specifically why the data are needed.
A general claim that data collection is “an essential component of effective
policy-making” is too little. Numbers don’t make policy.
Carol Hagemann-White
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
CEINAV presented to the Slovenian public on 27th February 2014
On February 27th 2014, the CEINAV project was presented to
the Slovenian scholar's and wider public.
Vlasta Jalušič, one of the principal investigators of Cultural
Encounters in Interventions against Violence at the Peace Institute, has spoken about the content, methods,
results and project partnership.
Three other Slovenian HERA projects were introduced at the event which was organised by the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and attended by the representatives of the Slovenian Ministry of Education, Science and Sports. The audience, mostly young scholars, has shown most interest in the projects development and partnerships. The representatives of the Ministry of Education, Science and Sports have announced the third HERA tender.
Vlasta Jalušič
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