• Home
  • Contact
  • FAQ
  • Login
  • frFrançais
  • enEnglish
  • esEspañol
Wikigender
Search
  • Home
  • About
  • Themes
  • Statistics
  • Community Portal
    • Events
    • Members
    • Forum
  • Wikigender University
    • Articles
    • Partners
Wikigender > Wikis > End Violence Against Women Coalition

End Violence Against Women Coalition

Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on Facebook
Facebook
  • Page
  • Discuss
  • History
  • Etc.
    • Frontpage
    • New Articles
    • Recently Modified
    • Recently Discussed
    • Most Discussed
    • Alphabetical Order

Wikis > End Violence Against Women Coalition

Table of Contents

  • 1 About End Violence Against Women
  • 2 Goals
  • 3 Campaigns
  • 4 Impact
  • 5 Publications
  • 6 See also
  • 7 External links

About End Violence Against Women

EVAW End Violence Against Women (EVAW) is the UK’s largest coalition of individuals and organisations campaigning to end all forms of violence against women and girls (VAWG) in the UK. It was established in 2005 under the auspices of the (now closed) Women’s National Commission’s VAWG Working Group. Founding members of the Coalition include Amnesty International UK, Women’s Aid, Rape Crisis England and Wales, Zero Tolerance, Womankind Worldwide , Southall Black Sisters, the TUC, Fawcett Society, Imkaan, Women’s Institute and Eaves. A full list of organisational members is here.

EVAW is Co-Chaired by Professor Liz Kelly and Marai Larasi. Its Executive Director is Holly Dustin.

Goals

EVAW’s vision is of a society where women and girls can live their lives free from violence and the threat of violence.
To achieve this the Coalition has four campaign goals:

1.To ensure that national, regional and local governments in the UK take all steps necessary to prevent and eliminate violence against women and girls including:

  • Developing integrated and strategic approaches to violence against women that are compliant with international and national obligations
  • Make prevention a core policy priority and invest in primary prevention
  • Ensuring that every woman and girl across the nations and regions of the UK has access to the support services that will end the violence and support them in rebuilding their lives

2.To enable individuals and organisations to become part of a movement to eliminate violence against women and girls including:

  • Increasing the capacity of civil society to support victims and challenge perpetrators
  • Changing the cultural acceptance of violence against women

3.For violence against women to be understood as a cause and consequence of women’s inequality and a violation of human rights
4.Sharing information and innovative practice around the UK to develop campaign strategies and provide a coherent voice to governments.

Campaigns

  • Keep the promise

Working with our members around the UK, we campaign for UK governments at national, regional and local levels to keep the promise to comply with international obligations under CEDAW, the Beijing Platform for Action and the Istanbul Convention to develop strategic and integrated approaches to tackling and eliminating all forms of violence against women and girls

  • Schools Safe 4 Girls

We campaign for the Westminster Government to take action to prevent VAWG before it begines. Our Schools Safe 4 Girls campaign builds on A Different World is Possible, a report developed with our experts setting out action needed including tackling harmful attitudes and behaviours at an early age through the education system.

  • Map of Gaps

We worked with the Equality and Human Rights Commission to publish a series of Map of Gaps reports which exposed the postcode lottery of specialised women’s support services in the UK.

  • London Safe for all Women

We work with our members in London to campaign for the Capital to be a global leader on women’s safety and support.

  • Media sexism

We campaign for action against a sexist and sexualised media that provides a conducive context for VAWG to occur. This includes giving evidence to the Leveson Inquiry with our members Eaves, Equality Now and Object/Turn Your Back on Page Three.

Impact

  • The publication of VAWG strategies in Westminster, Wales, London and local areas which represented a major shift in public policy from a fractured approach tackling single issues, to a more strategic and coordinated approach.
  • Giving evidence to the Leveson Inquiry with Coalition members Eaves, Object/Turn Your Back on Page 3 and Equality Now about media sexism, the objectification of women and the harmful impact of prejudicial reporting of VAWG. Media report here.
  • Producing Jack-Ass style short film, We Are Man, to tackle young men’s attitudes to sexual harassment and rape.
  • Campaigning for work in schools to prevent violence including our 2010 Yougov poll revealing high levels of sexual harassment in schools.
  • Exposing the postcode lottery of women’s support services in the Map of Gaps campaign with the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
  • Campaigning for London to be a global leader on women’s safety including campaigning on the Olympics, sexual harassment on public transport and ongoing commitment to a pan-London VAWG strategy.

Publications

  • A Different World is Possible: A call for long-term and targeted action to prevent violence against women and girls
  • A Different World is Possible: Promising practices to prevent violence against women and girls
  • Just the Women (with Eaves, Equality Now and Object)
  • Leveson Inquiry submissions
  • Making the Grade? Northern Ireland
  • Making the Grade? UK 2005
  • Making the Grade? UK 2006
  • Map of Gaps 1
  • Map of Gaps 2
  • Realising Rights, Fulfilling Obligations
  • Violence Against Women and Sport: A Literature Review

See also

  • Online Discussion: ‘Transforming social norms to prevent violence against women and girls.’

External links

  • More information about EVAW http://www.endviolenceagainstwomen.org.uk/
  • Like us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/endviolenceagainstwomen
  • Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/EVAWhd

Log in

  • Don't have an account? Signup Now »
  • Lost your password?

Tags cloud

Biography Campaign Data and statistics Definition Discrimination in the family Economic empowerment Education Environment Events Health and well-being Laws Migration Missing women Organisations Peace and security Political empowerment Publication Restricted civil liberties Restricted physical integrity Science and technology Social norms Sustainable Development Goals Wikigender University Wikigender university student article Youth

Archives (posts)

  • April 2020
  • October 2019
  • September 2018

Twitter feed

  • Mind the gap, close the gap! How can we address the #gender pay gap? With @OECD_Centre's Director @REArnadottir, no… https://t.co/CLn7y9xbgV
  • RT @estelle_loiseau: If you're interested in making lasting change for women as political leaders & you're attending @ReykjavikGlobal, do n…
  • Who's the leader? @OECD_Centre Director, @REArnadottir is moderating a Leaders' Talk tomorrow on shifting society's… https://t.co/SJze6ze6yt
  • RT @OECD_Centre: Are you at this week's @ReykjavikGlobal Forum? Stop by @OECD_Centre's session on how we can boost women's political empow…

Events calendar

2023
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
« Sep    
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930

DISCLAIMER

Most Wikigender content can be edited or supplemented by anybody with an Internet connection and a desire to do so. In consequence, the OECD assumes no responsibility whatsoever for the content of these pages.

Creativecommons

PARTNERS

Wigender benefits from a community of partners, experts and funders.

Find out more

SIGI

OCDE dev

Copyright 2015

MEDIA REVIEW
ONLINE DISCUSSIONS
EVENTS
PUBLICATIONS