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Zulema Altamirano Christian Veske 15 May, 2014 Stockholm

EIGE’s work on Gender-based Violence. Zulema Altamirano Christian Veske 15 May, 2014 Stockholm. Content. Content. The role of EIGE Preventing Domestic Violence in EU-28 Measuring Gender-based Violence in EU-28 Support Services for victims of DV Female Genital Mutilation

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Zulema Altamirano Christian Veske 15 May, 2014 Stockholm

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  1. EIGE’s work on Gender-based Violence ZulemaAltamirano Christian Veske 15 May, 2014 Stockholm

  2. Content Content • The role of EIGE • Preventing Domestic Violence in EU-28 • Measuring Gender-based Violence in EU-28 • Support Services for victims of DV • Female Genital Mutilation • Administrative data on GBV • Cost of Violence • Context: • Gender Equality Index • Gender Stereotypes • Raising awareness

  3. The role of EIGE

  4. Preventing Domestic Violence in EU-28 “Collection of methods, tools and good practices in the field of domestic violence (as described by area D of Beijing Platform for Action)”

  5. Awareness-raising campaigns • 144 examples (25 to young people). • 76% national coverage ; 22% regional; rest transnationals. • 52% by NGOs; 42% by governmental bodies; 6% by others. • Trends: • website or materials for ethnic minorities, and disable women • lesbian and gay communication strategies • minimum standards

  6. Training on prevention • 136 examples collected. • 67% directed to professional sectors: most to police and judiciary sector, followed by health personnel. • 64% present in formal curricula.

  7. Support services for victims • 254 examples of implemented methods and tools. • 61% with a national coverage, 39% regional. • 54% by NGOs, 44% by government, 2% by others. • 28% are direct services, 40% aimed at professionals.

  8. Programmes for perpetrators • 48 examples of programmes for perpetrators. • Mostly: • counselling, mentoring, coaching (69%); • 16% to professionals –networks, guideliness or minimum standards.

  9. Support services for victims of DV “Review of the implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action in the EU Member States: violence against women – victim support” Scope: • counselling centres • emergency services • hotlines • women’s shelters/crisis centres • legal advice for victims • health protocols • publicly available information Main findings • Specialised services for victims of DV, including counselling and shelters are • Insufficient • Unequally distributed in and among the Member States

  10. Female Genital Mutilation ““Study to map the current situation and trends of female genital mutilation in 27 EU Member States and Croatia” Main findings • No harmonised FGM prevalence estimates and no comparable national prevalence studies. • Administrative data not systematically collected or centralised • Need of a comprehensive strategy, based on a gender-sensitive and human-rights approach, which empowers girls and women to be in control of their lives and which balances the state measures of protection, prevention and prosecution. • Improvement in data collection and intensified efforts on the behavioural change among FGM-practising communities, decision-makers and stakeholders in the countries of origin.

  11. Administrative data sources on GBV “Mapping administrative data sources on GBV in the EU: current status and potential” Scope: • Intimate Partner Violence • Sexual Violence: • Rape • Sexual assault (excl.rape) • Sexual harassment • Stalking Sectors: • Police • Justice • Social Services • Health EU Mapping tool

  12. Administrative data sources on GBV

  13. Administrative data sources on GBV 14 MS 12 MS 28 MS 28 MS 10 MS (12 MS)

  14. Quality of administrative data

  15. Administrative data sources on GBV Main findings • Police and justice are the systems with the widest coverage of administrative data for all the types of GBV, followed by social services, and mainly for IPV, sexual assault and rape. • Social services are more focused on IPV and they are not influenced by criminalisation. • In 24 Member States there are data sources colleting disaggregated information by sex and age of victim and perpetrator and their relationship. EU Mapping tool

  16. Administrative data sources on GBV Some remarks • WHAT? A common understanding in terms and definitions. • WHY? Data are needed make the right policies and to measure their effectiveness. • HOW? A common methodology is required and quality assurance process to ensure reliability and comparability. Data on GBV must be disaggregated. • WHEN? There is no mandate on GBV data collection across EU-28. • WHERE? GBV is multisectorial: social-justice-health-public problem.

  17. Cost of Violence “Study to assess the cost of violence against women across EU-Member States” Scope: • Intimate Partner Violence • EU-28 • Who bears the cost • Sector and types of costs: • Health, welfare and labour market • Criminal and civil legal system and other public costs, • Human and emotional costs, • Impact future generation, • Long-term effects, etc.

  18. Gender gaps adjusted for levels of achievement Equality Inequality 1 100

  19. Results

  20. Gender Equality Index Room for improvement 54.0

  21. Study The involvement of Men in Gender Equality Initiatives in the EU The White Ribbon Campaign Two on-line discussions on Men and Gender Equality Men and Gender Equality a focus topic in RDC (2013) Study on Stereotypes Thematic Network on Men and Gender Equality

  22. Involvement of Men in Gender Equality Initiatives In total 317 organisations were mapped 24 entries related to violence Available on EIGE’s website Includes projects, activities, campaigns

  23. The White Ribbon Campaign 26 White Ribbon Ambassadors: Foreign Ministers of Estonia, Finland, Sweden, Lithuania, The Netherlands; Prime Minister of Malta; Commissioners of EMPL and REGIO; Civil Society activists; Ministers of Justice of Estonia and Ireland; Heads of EU Agencies; Minister for Gender Equality of Denmark; Michael Kaufman Members of Parliaments

  24. “I mean, it was on the other hand my father, who always used to tell me that because of the fact that I am a man, I should defend my sister. Because my sister, when she was very young, she was very pretty girl. And her male classmates constantly teased her, pulled her plaits and so on. And my father always used to tell me to try to demonstrate here that I am a man and to protect my sister.” A Man from Poland

  25. “I was born in a workers’ family, and my father he was very harsh and demanding with his wife, sometimes even violent, and this gave me a quite wrong vision of the relation between men and women, as I lived that moment as a male authority imposed on the family as a right and a duty, so for the whole time I was a boy I saw this figure.” A Man from Italy

  26. Thank you! European Institute of Gender Equality www.eige.europa.eu VILNIUS, Lithuania

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