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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category GBV.
  • It’s Not Ok: How Data from Nigeria Reveals the Role of Addressing Community Attitudes to End Violence Against Women 

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  March 22, 2022  //  By Maria Fernanda Espinosa & Onyishi Bukola Adeola
    Abuja,,Nigeria:,Cross,Section,Of,Women,Wearing,Facemasks,Down,From

    Globally, one third of women (736 million) have experienced physical and/or sexual violence, oftentimes when they were still children. Domestic violence and violence against women (VAW) have increased during the COVID-19 pandemic.  

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  • Raising Momentum for Integrating Respectful Maternity Care in Humanitarian Settings

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    Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 9, 2022  //  By Pooja Sripad & Andrea Edman
    RMC Afghan high res 2

    Greater than one third of all women experience mistreatment during facility-based childbirth. Mistreatment, particularly in humanitarian settings, may include verbal or physical abuse, poor patient-provider rapport, a lack of information about maternal and newborn health (MNH) services for both pregnant women and providers, lack of privacy within facilities, challenges with receiving informed consent from women for medical procedures due to language and cultural barriers, and denied or delayed care. Such mistreatment can stem from historical tensions between populations seeking care and health workers (both foreign and local) as well as systemic mistreatment of providers who are burned out and possibly carry their own biases. Evidence shows that some women delay seeking care, or avoid care entirely because of social fears stemming from negative stigma or negative perceptions of their situation. 

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  • The Lasting Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Women’s Work, Health, and Safety (New Report)

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  March 2, 2022  //  By Chanel Lee

    shutterstock_1840753183

    While the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the lives of many around the world, its effects on women have been particularly devastating. Even before the pandemic, women are highly affected by violence. Since the pandemic, rates of gender-based violence have risen, while uptake of critical health services have decreased. Women, especially low-income women, women of color, and migrant women, are also more likely to work in jobs that are underpaid, undervalued, and unprotected, and they comprise the majority of the frontline or “essential” workforce, which includes grocery and food retail workers, health care workers, and care workers.

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  • Through the COVID-19 Lens: Essential Services Needed to Prevent Unintended Pregnancies

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  December 15, 2021  //  By Shariq Farooqi
    Manica,,Mozambique,-,September,08,2021:,Women,Dressed,In,Traditional

    “The current pandemic is straining human resources, disrupting supply chains and service delivery, and negatively impacting service seeking among women and girls in countries across the globe,” said Sarah Barnes, Project Director of the Wilson Center’s Maternal Health Initiative. She spoke at a recent event, co-hosted by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA), on unintended pregnancies during the COVID-19 pandemic. The increasing rates of unintended pregnancies during the pandemic have exacerbated the vulnerabilities of many women, said Anneka Knutsson, Chief of the Sexual and Reproductive Health Branch at UNFPA.

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  • Accessing Justice for Gender-Based Violence in Humanitarian Settings

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  December 8, 2021  //  By Sarah B. Barnes

    Saida-lebanon.,Women,Inside,An,Abandoned,Construction,Site,Occupied,By,Syrian

    Gender-based violence (GBV) is a global epidemic rooted in gender inequality and an imbalance in power dynamics. All persons are at risk of violence because of their gender or perceived gender. Women and girls—including transgender women and girls—experience disproportionate gender-based violence, and this violence is even more prevalent among women and girls who have been forcibly displaced.

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  • 16DaysCampaign Calls to End Femicide: Research Shows Women in Perinatal Period at Risk

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    Dot-Mom  //  Reading Radar  //  December 1, 2021  //  By Shariq Farooqi

    Women's March Oakland 2019

    “Femicide is an important, but often unreported, cause of maternal mortality. This research documents the immediate need for universal abuse assessment of all pregnant women,” write the authors of the self-declared first study to report a definite link between abuse during pregnancy and attempted/completed femicide—the gender related killing of women. This study was published in 2002.

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  • COVID-19 Pandemic Exacerbates Violence Against Refugee Women and Girls

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    Covid-19  //  Dot-Mom  //  November 24, 2021  //  By Chanel Lee

    Idomeni,,Greece,-,March,2,,2016.,A,Refugee,Woman,Carries

    Currently, refugee women and girls are facing three concurrent crises: their ongoing humanitarian crisis, the health crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the invisible crisis of gender-based violence (GBV). COVID-19 has severely worsened various dimensions of inequality for refugee women and girls. A 2020 report found that 73 percent of forcibly displaced women interviewed across 15 African countries reported elevated cases of domestic or intimate partner violence due to the pandemic. In addition, 51 percent reported sexual violence and 32 percent observed a rise in early and forced marriages.

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  • ‘Women’s Bodies are No One’s Battlefields’: Preventing War and Conflict-Related Sexual Violence

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    On the Beat  //  November 1, 2021  //  By Shruti Samala
    New,Delhi,,India-aug,24,2021:,Afghan,Woman,Shouting,Slogans,With

    “Since time immemorial, rape has been used to control women’s sexuality, labor, and reproduction, to shred the social fabric, to conquer territories and populations, and crush the enemy’s moral and will to resist,” said Under Secretary General Pramila Patten, UN Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict, at an event focused on addressing conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) organized by The Secretary’s Office for Global Women’s Issues, Search for Common Ground, and the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security. In the past two decades, legislative reform, sanctions against perpetrators, and systematic reporting have slowly transformed the climate of impunity surrounding CRSV, said Patten.

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