en(gender)ed

en(gender)ed features stories that explore the systems, practices, and policies that enable gender-based violence and oppression and the solutions to end it. We teach feminism and decolonize hearts and minds, one story at a time.

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episode 130: Domestic Violence Awareness Month Community Conversation on Systems Change


This year, in recognition of DVAM or Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the Engendered Collective hosted a series of community conversations to bring greater awareness to domestic abuse and gender-based violence.  This first conversation deals with how we can create systems change and build a culture of accountability.  Our guests included Elle Kamihira and Dr. Emma Katz.

Elle Kamihira is survivor, activist, and a multi-disciplinary director who has spent the last twenty years collaborating on a variety of award-winning film, museum, documentary, and theater projects. Current projects include Jennifer 42, an animated documentary that takes a close look at the role of coercive control in the true story of the murder of Jennifer Magnano, and The Most Wicked Problem, a docu-series about femicide. 

Dr. Emma Katz, a researcher based in England focused on coercive control of children.  Her most recent article When Coercive Control Continues to Harm Children: Post‐Separation Fathering, Stalking and Domestic Violence can be downloaded for free here . Her book Coercive Control in Children’s and Mothers’ Lives will be published by Oxford University Press in 2021. Follow Emma on Twitter at @DrEmmaKatz

During our conversation, Elle, Emma, and I touched upon the following resources:

  • Lisa Fischel-Wolovick's article, Battered Mothers and Children in the Courts: A Lawyer's View
  • The difference between primary (stopping violence before it starts), secondary (preventing violence from escalating), and tertiary (minimizing negative impact of violence and trauma) prevention of domestic abuse
  • Evan Stark's work on "coercive control"
  • A discussion paper from the government of NWS on criminalizing coercive control and Women's Safety NSW's Position Paper on criminalizing coercive control
  • Jane Gilmore's work on violence and the representation of women in the media
  • Nazir Afzal's work on prosecuting gender-based crimes in Britain
  • Britain' efforts to categorize sexist and misogynistic acts as hate crimes
  • How Scotland's laws on coercive control have stricter sentencing than England
  • The work of the CEDAR Network addressing mother-child victims of abuse
  • "Perspecticide" as a manifestation of coercive control
  • Using the "Housing First" model to address housing insecurity for victims of abuse

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 November 19, 2020  58m