Engaging men in sexual assault prevention
Stathopoulos, Mary
Engaging men in sexual assault prevention Mary Stathopoulos - Melbourne, Vic. : Australian Centre for the Study of Sexual Assault, Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2013 - electronic document (20 p.); PDF file: 634.62 KB; HTML version available 20 p. ; 30 cm - ACSSA wrap .
ACSSA wrap, no. 14, 2013
Key messages:
- The next step in sexual assault prevention is to engage men—both as facilitators and as participants in prevention.
- If men are to be engaged in the prevention of sexual assault there must be a shared understanding of the fact that men have a positive role to play.
- A consideration of how to engage men in prevention efforts must take into account the ways in which some men may resist prevention messages - whether that resistance stems from discomfort, rejection of ideas, or from other sources.
- There is a tension when masculine gender stereotypes are used as a tool for engaging men in prevention while evidence suggests that these same stereotypes can contribute as underlying factors in the perpetration of sexual assault and violence against women. (From the publication)
GENDER
ENGAGING MEN AND BOYS IN VIOLENCE PREVENTION
MASCULINITY
MEN
PRIMARY PREVENTION
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
PREVENTION
SEXUAL VIOLENCE
AUSTRALIA
Engaging men in sexual assault prevention Mary Stathopoulos - Melbourne, Vic. : Australian Centre for the Study of Sexual Assault, Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2013 - electronic document (20 p.); PDF file: 634.62 KB; HTML version available 20 p. ; 30 cm - ACSSA wrap .
ACSSA wrap, no. 14, 2013
Key messages:
- The next step in sexual assault prevention is to engage men—both as facilitators and as participants in prevention.
- If men are to be engaged in the prevention of sexual assault there must be a shared understanding of the fact that men have a positive role to play.
- A consideration of how to engage men in prevention efforts must take into account the ways in which some men may resist prevention messages - whether that resistance stems from discomfort, rejection of ideas, or from other sources.
- There is a tension when masculine gender stereotypes are used as a tool for engaging men in prevention while evidence suggests that these same stereotypes can contribute as underlying factors in the perpetration of sexual assault and violence against women. (From the publication)
GENDER
ENGAGING MEN AND BOYS IN VIOLENCE PREVENTION
MASCULINITY
MEN
PRIMARY PREVENTION
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
PREVENTION
SEXUAL VIOLENCE
AUSTRALIA