Sunday, April 26, 2015

Fire up creativity - Artist meeting in London

On 30th and 31th March 2015 CEINAV brought together all their 4 artist researchers in London Metropolitan University: Iona Roisin from the UK team, Lana Zdravković from the Slovenian team, Ninette Rothmüller from the German team and Raquel Felgueiras from the Portuguese team. We exchanged our experiences and views about working with marginalized, deprived and discriminated people in the context of violence as well as debated about methodology we will use on the art workshops with the survivors of violence. In each country we will moderate the creative process which will be based on the stories created out of the interviews with the survivors but those will just inform the artists; the art workshops will not be built around the stories as some kind of script.
In each country one or two art workshops will be implemented for all three forms of violence. Whilst there has to be a set of basic parameters for the workshops some of the more specific questions cannot be the same across the four country contexts, as they are dependent on the particulars of who and how many agree to take part in the workshops, where they are located geographically and how each artist develops the workshop concept.  There are, therefore, layers of flexibility and variability in the creative process which we should consider an asset, part of what the project is in fact about – the processes and creative outcomes will not be the same, they are cultural encounters!
The process needs to produce something – a creative outcome – from what participants want to communicate about intervention that will be accessible to various audiences. 
All artists will work within their fields of experience having in mind that including creative art in the research project is a certain experiment, both for artists and researchers. But since we have high ethical standards and respect the decisions and wishes of the people we will work with we hope it will be fruitful for all of us. 

Lana Zdravkovic

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Research cooperation and synergy

At an advisory board meeting of the project “Disclosure and prevention of sexual violence against male children and youth (AuP)”, Carol Hagemann-White & Barbara Kavemann discussed interviewing intervention professionals and victims of violence in a full-day meeting in Berlin on February 27, 2015; three other projects also participated. Finding interview partners emerged as a challenging, but above all time-consuming process, and it is particularly difficult to reach young  persons (under 30) to describe their experiences of intervention.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Alle working paper erreichbar


In 2014 führten die fünf CEINAV Partner im jeweiligen Land zwei multi-professionelle Workshops  zu jeder der drei Formen von Gewalt, die im Projekt untersucht werden: Gewalt in Paarbeziehungen, körperliche Misshandlung und Vergewaltigung von Kindern, und Frauenhandel. Insgesamt haben über 250 Fachkräfte in vier Ländern an diesen Workshops teilgenommen und anhand einer typischen Fallgeschichte über die Herausforderungen effektiver Intervention diskutiert.  Die Diskussionen wurden zunächst in jedem Land im Hinblick auf die Handlungsorientierungen und die ethischen und praktischen Schwierigkeiten analysiert. Die Ergebnisse wurden sodann in einem mehrtägigen Seminar Ende September in Porto mit dem gesamten Projektteam und den assoziierten Partnern diskutiert. Dabei ging es darum, die in der Tat recht unterschiedlichen Vorgehensweisen zu verstehen und die dahinter liegenden Selbstverständlichkeiten sichtbar zu machen. Die zwölf working papers wurden danach überarbeitet und der Post mit den Links nach und nach aktualisiert. Seit dem 2. Februar sind sie alle online zugänglich. Kommentare sind sehr willkommen!

Friday, January 30, 2015

Project leader visits FPCEUP, University of Porto (UP)

From January 21st to 24th 2015, Prof. Carol Hagemann-White, CEINAV's project leader, visited the Porto CEINAV team in FPCEUP, University of Porto (UP). During this visit, Prof. Hagemann-White met with UP officials and with the Porto CEINAV team to work on the domestic violence comparative paper. Hence, with the DV working papers from Germany, Portugal, the UK, and Slovenia in hand, we discussed the different legislations and policies that exist across the four countries. We also talked about some of the main frames and dilemmas that emerged in the workshops. Prof. Hagemann-White's much appreciated visit ended with a Pastoral Symphony concert in “Casa da Música” where we took this photo.

Monday, December 22, 2014

Working Papers on Intervention published

Right in time for a little early christmas present we have nearly all of our working papers on intervention polished and published.

The first versions were written for the discussions during the big porto meeting. After the working seminar all the authors reworked and polished their papers and now we have most of them online (two are missing for technical reasons but will be added as soon as we can). All of them will also be accessible via the CEINAV Website at London MET.

We have written a background paper to decribe our method read the papers here:
 --> Background paper <--

Read the working papers:

Working Paper on Intervention Against Child Abuse and Neglect in Germany
Working Paper on Intervention Against Child Abuse and Neglect in Portugal
Working Paper on Intervention Against Child Abuse and Neglect in Slovenia
Working Paper on Intervention Against Child Abuse and Neglect in UK
Working Paper on Intervention Against Domestic Violence in Germany
Working Paper on Intervention Against Domestic Violence in Portugal
Working Paper on Intervention Against Domestic Violence in Slovenia
Working Paper on Intervention Against Domestic Violence in UK
Working Paper on Intervention Against Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in Germany
Working Paper on Intervention Against Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in Portugal
Working Paper on Intervention Against Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in Slovenia
Working Paper on Intervention Against Trafficking for Sexual Exploitation in UK


Thursday, November 27, 2014

New high court decision will help to prosecute traffickers in Germany

On October 8 2014 our associate partner KOK co-hosted (with Terre des femmes and the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung) a major conference “Focus on Women’s Rights” in Berlin, where the consequences for Germany of EU law against trafficking and of the Istanbul Convention of the Council of Europe were discussed. There, Carol Hagemann-White learnt of a recent high court decision that will enable prosecutors as well as lawyers representing trafficked women to obtain convictions more easily.

Prosecuting traffickers in Germany has been difficult, not only because victims may not be willing or able to testify, but also because “coercion” and “exploitation” are often hard to prove. On July 16, 2014 the federal high court of Germany issued a decision (rejecting an appeal by a convicted trafficker in the case of three Nigerian women) that the key criterion of coercion is sufficiently proven by the fact that the women had been in a precarious economic situation in their home country. This is a decision with far reaching implications! The court ruled that the ensuing restriction of the women’s freedom of action and decision had the concrete effect of reducing their ability to resist attacks on their sexual self-determination. It is thus not necessary to prove any further circumstances beyond the predominating negative social conditions in the home country. Furthermore, it is irrelevant whether or not the victims had already decided to work as prostitutes in Germany before being trafficked to this country, or whether the coercive pressures used by the accused after they were brought to Germany (such as the demand that they work to pay off a debt) led to their final compliance. If you are interested in the original document you can find a pdf here.

From the original German text of the court ruling (Bundesgerichtshof  5 StR 154/14):

 

Der Senat entnimmt den Feststellungen, dass das Merkmal der „Zwangslage“ schon bei der „Rekrutierung“ der drei Nebenklägerinnen in Nigeria erfüllt war. Alle Nebenklägerinnen befanden sich in ihrem Heimatland in prekären wirtschaftlichen Verhältnissen (vgl. auch UA S. 46). Die damit verbundene Einschränkung ihrer Entscheidungs- und Handlungsmöglichkeiten war – was genügt – konkret geeignet, ihren Widerstand gegen Angriffe auf die sexuelle Selbstbestimmung herabzusetzen (vgl. zu § 180b StGB aF BGH, Beschluss vom 25. Februar 1997 – 4 StR 40/97, BGHSt 42, 399, 400 f.; Eisele in Schönke/Schröder, StGB, 29. Aufl., § 232 Rn. 10 mwN; siehe auch BT-Drucks. 12/2046 S. 4). Es ist dementsprechend nicht erforderlich, dass zu den im Heimatland der Opfer herrschenden schlechten sozialen Verhältnissen in Bezug auf das jeweilige Opfer noch weitere erschwerende Umstände hinzu-kommen (aM wohl Fischer, StGB, 61. Aufl., § 232 Rn. 9). Damit kann letztlich offenbleiben, ob die Opfer – durch die Angeklagte veranlasst – bereits vor ihrer Einschleusung beschlossen hatten, in Deutschland die Prostitution aufzunehmen, oder ob dieser Entschluss erst durch die Maßnahmen der Angeklagten in Deutschland (unter anderem Forderung, Beträge von über 50.000 € „abzuarbeiten“, Hinweis auf den „Voodoo-Eid“; vgl. dazu UA S. 45 f.) endgültig bewirkt

Monday, November 17, 2014

DIJuF statement regarding future handling of minor refugees

The increase of unaccompanied minor refugees over last years and months caused a critical situations. The communities in which most of the children and juveniles arrive lack care facilities as well as qualified personnel. Therefore Bavaria tabled a bill in the Federal Assembly which takes a distinct regulatory approach of distributing the young persons by quotas throughout Germany.

Aspects of the children’s best interest are not taken into account yet. The Länder Bavaria, Berlin, Hamburg and North Rhine-Westfalia held a hearing in Berlin on 14 Nov. 2014. The DIJuF participated and promoted the children’s rights. For more information see http://www.dijuf.de/fachliche-hinweisestellungnahmen-des-dijuf.html.