Section 5. Other Resources
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence www.creative-interventions.org • [email protected] This pre-release version (06.2012) is available for public use – Final version is forthcoming Section 5. Other Resources In This Section: 5.1. Key Words – Definitions: Words We Use and What They Mean to Creative Interventions 5.2. Real Life Stories and Examples from the Toolkit 5.3. Creative Interventions Anti-Oppression Policy (Anti-Discrimination/Anti- Harassment) 5.4. Community-Based Responses to Interpersonal Violence Workshop 5.5. Taking Risks: Implementing Grassroots Community Accountability Strategies, by Communities Against Rape and Abuse (CARA). 5.6. Distinguishing between Violence and Abuse, by Connie Burk, Northwest Network of Bisexual, Trans, Lesbian and Gay Survivors of Abuse 5.7. Portrait of Praxis: An Anatomy of Accountability, by Esteban Kelly and Jenna Peters-Golden of Philly Stands Up (PSU) 5.8. Confronting Sexual Assault: Transformative Justice on the Ground in Philadelphia, by Bench Ansfield and Timothy Colman of Philly Stands Up (PSU) 5.9. Shame, Realisation and Restoration: The Ethics of Restorative Practice, by Alan Jenkins 5.10. Tips for Seeking a Therapist [for People Who Have Done Sexual Harm], by Anonymous. 5.11. Resource List Section 5: Other Resources Page 5-1 Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence www.creative-interventions.org • [email protected] This pre-release version (06.2012) is available for public use – Final version is forthcoming Section 5.1. Keywords – Definitions: Words We Use and What They Mean to Creative Interventions Ableism: Attitudes, actions, or structures that belittle or put down a person(s) because of actual or perceived physical, developmental or mental impairment. Abuser (See Person Doing Harm) Accountable, Accountability: For people involved, thinking about the ways they may have contributed to violence, recognizing their roles, acknowledging the ways they may need to make amends for their actions and make changes toward ensuring that violence does not continue and that healthy alternatives can take its place. Ageism: Attitudes, actions, or structures that belittle or put down a person(s) because of their youth or actual or perceived lack of lived experience. Ally (See Community Ally): Bisexual: Being attracted to two sexes or two genders, but not necessarily simultaneously or equally. Bystander: Someone not directly involved in a situation of harm, but who may have witnessed the harm and who may be called on to address the situation of harm or prevent future harm from happening. Creative Interventions tends to use the term allies rather than bystanders since the term bystanders sometimes seems like someone who just happens to be in the area of where the violence happened rather than someone who may have significant relationships with the people involved in violence – what we refer to as allies or community allies. Collective: An approach relying on collaboration including shared capacity, resources and decision-making. Collusion, Collude, Colluding: Acting on behalf of the person(s), groups or institutions perpetrating harm through supporting their violence, denying it, minimizing it, excusing it, or by blaming the survivor or victim. Community: A grouping of people based on some common experience including geography, interests or values, identities, or interests. When we use this term we do not assume complete agreement within the group nor do we assume it to have only positive dynamics. Community Accountability: A process in which a community such as family, friends, neighbors, co-workers or community members work together to transform situations of harm. This can also describe a process in which the Section 5: Other Resources Page 5-2 Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence www.creative-interventions.org • [email protected] This pre-release version (06.2012) is available for public use – Final version is forthcoming community recognizes that they are impacted by violence even if it is primarily between individuals, that they may have participated in allowing the violence to happen or even causing the violence, and are responsible for resolving the violence. Community Ally: Someone from one’s community (either close-in community member or someone from within a larger community) who may become involved as an active participant in an intervention – and who brings their energy, skills or other resources to help bring about positive change. Community-Based: Approaches that build on and promote community knowledge, skills, values and resources especially those of oppressed communities. Criminal Legal System: Another name for the criminal justice system but one which emphasizes that this system may actually not be connected to real justice. It may also take into account the civil system of law such as that governing divorce, child custody, property ownership and lawsuits. Criminal Justice System: The system controlled by the state or the government which produces people who are considered illegal, laws that determine who is criminal and who is not, the system under which people are determined to be criminal or not, the system of punishments and the actual carrying out of the punishment, itself, most notably including incarceration, parole and probation, and the death penalty. Criminalization: The process through which actions (most often directly associated with people oppressed communities) become illegal. Culture: A shared system of learned values, beliefs, and practices of a group of people. Engagement: Meaningful communication with someone including their involvement or participation in an intervention. Gay: Term often used to describe male-identified people who are attracted to other male-identified people. Sometimes used as an umbrella term for all queer identities. Gender: Social constructions applied to behaviors, expectations, roles, representations used to delineate people as men, women, and transgender or gender-variant. Different from sex or sexuality. Gender-Based Violence: A phrase used to describe violence targeting specific individuals or groups on the basis of their gender. Section 5: Other Resources Page 5-3 Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence www.creative-interventions.org • [email protected] This pre-release version (06.2012) is available for public use – Final version is forthcoming Gender Queer or Gender Non-Conforming: Demonstrating gender behaviors and traits not associated with a person’s biological sex as typically dictated by dominant society. Gendered Violence: A phrase often used instead of gender-based violence to describe violence that targets individuals or group on the basis of their gender or through ideas and actions that force certain ideas about gender through the use of violence. Harm: Some form of injury to a person, group or community. This injury can be of many types: physical, financial, emotional, sexual, spiritual, environmental and so on. Harm Reduction: A set of practical strategies that reduce negative consequences of drug use that meet drug users "where they're at," addressing conditions of use along with the use itself while engaging users in deciding the best course of action. Recently, harm reduction principles have been applied to a range of situations including interpersonal violence to advocate for approaches that involve those people closest in to the situation of harm to reduce as many harmful factors as possible while acknowledging that complete separation may not be possible or favorable. Heteronormativity: A system that assumes that heterosexuality is “normal”— thereby marginalizing people who do not identify as heterosexual and carrying out the activities and institutions of everyday life as if everyone is and should be heterosexual. Heterosexism: A system privileging heterosexuality above all other sexual orientations and marginalizing people who do not identify as heterosexual. Hir: A gender neutral pronoun that can be used instead of his/hers. Holistic: Holding all parts including survivor(s), allies/community, person(s) doing harm to possibilities of positive change. Homophobia: The irrational fear and intolerance of people who are homosexual or of homosexual feelings. It is generally due to one’s internal fear of those feelings in oneself but instead directed to other people. Interpersonal Violence: Harm occurring between people in non-intimate relationships, usually in workplaces, community networks or institutions, or other collective formations. Intervention: Action(s) taken to address, end, significantly reduce, or prevent violence. Section 5: Other Resources Page 5-4 Creative Interventions Toolkit: A Practical Guide to Stop Interpersonal Violence www.creative-interventions.org • [email protected] This pre-release version (06.2012) is available for public use – Final version is forthcoming Intimate Violence: A phrase used to describe actions including physical, emotional, and sexual abuse of children, elders, and people with disabilities by people known to them. It also includes intimate partner abuse, sexual violence committed in the context of a relationship, marital rape. Lesbian: Term often used to describe female-identified people who are attracted to other female-identified people. Liberation: To be freed from oppression, confinement, or control. Liberatory Approach: An