Clothesline Project

Posted on October 13, 2009 by Savvy Group

October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month! Check out what a nearby University is doing in an effort to address the issue!

Clothesline project raises awareness
By Sonia Mugabo
Zach Spaulding

This year marks the third annual Clothesline Project hosted at Buena Vista University (BVU). This project was originally started in Cape Cod, Massachusetts during the year 1990.

Created in an effort to address the issue of violence against women, the project has spread all over the country including throughout the Storm Lake Community and the BVU campus.

In previous years, the Clothesline Project has been sponsored by different organizations around campus.

Last year, Dana Calandrino, Resident Director of Pierce and White Halls, organized the project for the Purple Star Campaign. The year before that, it was organized by a special interest suite concerned about social consciousness.

This year the Project will be co-sponsored by two campus organizations: Students Against a Violent Environment (SAVE) and Amnesty International (AI).

The Clothesline Project booth was up all week, Monday to Friday, and addressed the issues of domestic violence and sexual assault, as well as child abuse through the use of T-shirts. The Centers Against Abuse and Sexual Assault (CAASA) in Storm Lake provided the T-shirts. The shirts were designed by survivors of abuse or by others who are concerned with this issue.

To promote this event, T-shirts with the saying “We love consensual sex” are also being sold for the price of $5. The money received from the t-shirt sales will be given to the student organization of SAVE.

Additionally, purple bracelets that say, “Save Lives, Erase Violence” will be available to purchase.

The profit from the bracelets will be given to CAASA (Centers Against Abuse and Sexual Assault).

The month of October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Seniors Chloe Bishop and Renee Fagen who are co-presidents of SAVE thought this project would be an ideal awareness-building event to start off the month of October.

This project will help educate students and the BVU community about the violence around the world.

“These topics are taboo in our society; an ironic situation since sexual assault, domestic violence and child abuse are so prevalent. Nobody wants to talk about the violence that’s happening, but the reality is that it will never end until we do,” Bishop said.

Bishop emphasizes how important it is for survivors of domestic violence to speak out about their experiences and for others to listen to their stories.

“If you’re a survivor, make sure you tell someone you’re story, whether to a friend, a family member, the police or a counselor. And if you know someone who is a survivor, be supportive. Listen to their story and always let them know you are there for them. Most importantly, do not be silent. Speak out against the violence that’s happening,” Bishop said.

To view the original article, visit:
http://www.ucbvu.com/news/clothesline-project-raises-awareness-1.625170

SAVVY! Basic Fall Workshop

Posted on September 14, 2009 by Savvy Group

Hello everyone!!

We are excited to be gearing up for our Fall Basic Workshop! We hope to have a big turn out of both new and returning students this year! Our workshop will be held Friday, September 25-Sunday, September 27. It is free to participants, as we are funded by a federal grant to prevent violence against women.

Our workshops are experience-based, so we have a variety of activities that get you involved! We learn about sexual assault, intimate partner violence and stalking and what we can all do to help prevent them from happening.

If you are interested in learning more or getting involved in the cause, please visit http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy or email us savvy@usd.edu to register for the workshop!

We do not see women as potential victims, but as allies. We do not see men as potential perpetrators, but as allies. Become a SAVVY! ally!

Summer Break

Posted on June 09, 2009 by Savvy Group

Hello! I hope everyone is having a great summer and can find some time to relax outdoors. Because of summer break, SAVVY! hours are minimized. Our blogging will be reduced, although we encourage everyone to post articles or thoughts they may have that pertain to sexual assault, dating violence, rape, or stalking. We would love to hear from all of you! Have a safe and happy summer!

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month

Posted on April 21, 2009 by Savvy Group

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month!

SAVVY! would like to thank each person who participated in our event "Artists Against Sexual Assault"! We had some amazing entries that vividly depict what sexual assault may feel like to the victim or people close to them. It is important that we talk about what sexual assault is and what steps we can take to prevent it and keep ourselves and friends and family members safe.

The Artists Against Sexual Assault artwork will be displayed at USD soon! We will keep you updated when we know where for sure!

Meanwhile, to learn more about sexual assault prevention, please visit our website: http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy
There you will find links to important information as well as links to other websites on the subject.

Remember that sexual assault effects more than just the victim. Find out what you can do to be active in the prevention of this crime!

Artists Against Sexual Assault

Posted on March 26, 2009 by Savvy Group

Hello All!

The SAVVY! Workshop went really well! We had a wonderful turn-out of participants who have so much energy and insight to add to our cause on campus! :) Welcome to all of you who participated in our workshop and are now members of the SAVVY! team!

The next SAVVY! event we are getting ready for is Artists Against Sexual Assault. April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month; so SAVVY! is teaming up with artists in an effort to raise awareness in our community about sexual assault. We are seeking artwork depicting the devastating effects of these crimes. We need YOUR contribution!!!

All mediums are welcome and you do not have to be a student at USD nor do you have to be an art major to participate. Everyone is welcome and encouraged to take part!
There is specific information regarding size limitations and location of delivery on our website: http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy/calendar/2009/event_2009_04_artists-against-sexual-assault.html
There is also a link to print entry forms as well.

The deadline for submissions has been extended to April 9th at 5pm. There is still time for you to contribute!

There is no fee to enter and artworks will be juried for prizes.

This is a great opportunity to help your community as well as have your artwork displayed!

Help SAVVY! raise sexual assault awareness at the U. by submitting your original artwork to Artists Against Sexual Assault!

SAVVY! Spring Workshop

Posted on March 17, 2009 by Savvy Group

Get nformd! Get nvolvd!

We hope everyone had a very fun and safe spring break! The sunshine is here to greet us back this week! :) SAVVY! is having our Basic Workshop for the spring this coming weekend and we would love to see you there! We kick off the weekend on Friday, March 20 at 5:30pm in Delzell Ed Bldg, room 212, and will finish up on Sunday around 4:30pm.

Our experience-based workshop is offered free of charge! Our peer-education program is funded by a grant through the Department of Justice that focuses on preventing violence against women.
Using lively small and large group discussions, role plays, an online sexual assault prevention program, and games, students will gain confidence in recognizing and addressing violence against women. Students also learn appropraite bystander behavior, visit the local ER to see a rape kit demonstration, visit the Vermillion Police Department to learn how law enforcement responds to violence against women, how to file a restraining order, and so much more!!

Registration is available online at SAVVY!'s website: http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy
Group size is limited, so get registered soon!

BONUS: Upon completion of our Basic workshop, participants become members of SAVVY! and can function as SAVVY! advocates, become part of the Speaker's Bureau, and train to co-facilitate at upcoming SAVVY! workshops.

Continuing Education Units (CEUs), Independent Study credits, Greek Week points, and IdEA action hours may be awarded. (Action approval form must be submitted with registration.)

For more information or to register, please contact SAVVY! at savvy@usd.edu
or visit: http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy

CALCASA Institute, 2009 in Hawaii!

Posted on February 24, 2009 by Savvy Group

We have recently returned from our trip to beautiful Honolulu, Hawaii for the 2009 CALCASA (California Coalition Against Sexual Assault) Institute http://www.calcasa.org/. We learned so much from so many wonderful presenters and have returned with renewed energy to put towards our prevention of violence against women at USD! There were four of us that attended the three day conference. We had the opportunity to choose from many different topics addressing sexual assault, intimate partner violence and stalking. We are very excited to have brought back new ideas for SAVVY!

If you are interested in learning more about the topics that were addressed at the institute, please visit the following websites!

The Real Men of MSU (Montclair State University,New Jersey)
Center for Non-violence and prevention programs
www.montclair.edu/RealMen or http://www.montclair.edu/cnvpp/index.html
--This session described the creative way the cnvpp at Montclair State University got their male students involved in preventing violence!

Voices and Faces Project, Anne Ream, Chicago, Illinois. http://www.voicesandfaces.org/
--Voices and Faces is a literary documentary of survivors of sexual assault. This project sheds light on the true humaness of each person by using their real stories accompanied by their pictures and names.

Our Sisters in Indian Country, St. Paul, Minnesota.
Tribal Court Clearing House: www.tlpi.org
Amnesty International: Maze of Injustice www.amnestyusa.org/women
--The issues of domestic violence and sexual assault were addressed in this session. Native American women are faced with additional issues when assaulted depending on who's jurisdiction the crime takes place in.

Best Practices Campus Stalking Policy
--Do you know the stalking laws in your state? Are they the same at the University campus? Know your rights!
--South Dakota stalking laws: http://www.ncvc.org/src/main.aspx?dbID=DB_SouthDakota123
University of South Dakota: http://www.usd.edu/studentserv/handbooks/StudentHandbook20082009.pdf Student Code of Conduct begins page 79.

These are only a few of the informative programs we got to attend at the CALCASA Institute. For more information, visit: http://www.calcasa.org/

Tell us what you think! Do you have ideas about how to get USD students involved in the prevention of violence on our campus? We want to hear from you! Email SAVVY! at savvy@usd.edu

Enlisting the Aid of Hairstylists as Sentinels for Domestic Abuse

Posted on February 02, 2009 by Savvy Group

Martha Castillo knew her client had a problem because their weekly hair-straightening sessions were always interrupted by phone calls from a boyfriend angrily accusing her of being with another man. Magda Florentino noticed cigarette burns on a woman’s temples when she pulled back her hair for washing — and did not buy the explanation that they had happened accidentally while she was bartending.

And Candida Vasquez received a hysterical call from a customer soon after she had spent three hours knitting extensions into the woman’s hair. Her boyfriend hated the look, and in a fit of rage he had cut off not only the extensions, but also the rest of her hair.

Ms. Vasquez said she was not surprised by the call. Troubled clients tell her their personal stories all the time. “They are so tormented, they just come in and share,” she said.

The privileged, often therapeutic relationship between hairdressers and clients has long been the subject of magazine articles and movies. A growing movement in New York and across the nation tries to harness that bond to identify and prevent domestic violence, a pervasive problem that victims are often too ashamed to reveal to law enforcement or other public officials.

Ms. Vasquez, Ms. Castillo and Ms. Florentino are all stylists in Manhattan who have been trained (or are being trained) as part of a one-year-old program by the city’s Administration for Children’s Services in beauty salons in the Washington Heights area, where many cases of domestic abuse and neglect include violence that is not necessarily aimed at children.

The initiative joins similar efforts that have been sprouting across the nation; perhaps the best known, called Cut It Out and based in Chicago, has trained 40,000 salon workers in all 50 states to recognize signs of domestic abuse. In the past few months, the Cut It Out program was also adopted by the Empire Education Group, which has 87 cosmetology schools, and endorsed by the American Association of Cosmetology Schools, the trade organization representing another 800 schools.

Nearly 600,000 women and girls and 144,000 men and boys nationwide were victims of violence by an intimate partner in 2006, according to the federal Bureau of Justice Statistics. In New York last year, the police received hundreds of domestic disturbance calls every day and recorded about 55,000 crimes connected to domestic violence.

Neither the city’s program nor the much larger Cut It Out, founded in 2002, tracks how many women the programs have referred for help, so it is hard to assess their effectiveness. But law enforcement officials in New York and nationally have praised the beauty-shop approach for reaching a population that normally hides from authorities.

Kathy Ryan, chief of the Domestic Violence Unit of the New York Police Department, said that battered women were such a hard population to reach that “preventing even one death should be considered success.”

The police have tried doing outreach to victims by, among other things, setting up domestic violence-education tables at community events, only to find that no one wants to be seen near them. But the atmosphere is different in the safety of a beauty salon.

“The salon may be one of the few places women might be without their abuser around,” said Laurie Magid, a former state prosecutor who is acting United States attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. “This program really addresses a need. You don’t have a case unless you have a crime reported in the first place and that is the difficult area of domestic violence.”

While Cut it Out trains stylists offsite, the Washington Heights workshops, conducted in Spanish, take place inside beauty parlors during the hours that clients are served. This not only makes it easier for people to participate, but also enhances the comfort factor.

“The salon is a place where everyone already feels at home,” said Sharon Kagawa of the Administration for Children’s Services, the agency that recruits salons for the program. “So they can be more honest.”

The Washington Heights program started in 2007, when a woman walked into the Porto Pelo Unisex salon, just north of the George Washington Bridge, and unashamedly began telling her story to everyone in shouting distance.

She told of how her children had been removed from her home by the city because her husband beat them and her, but said she could not leave him because she feared deportation. As she wept, stylists and customers gathered around to offer comfort, but they had little advice on how to get help.

But Ingrid Dominguez, the director of the child welfare agency’s Washington Heights Family Preservation Program, who happened to be getting her hair done at Porto Pelo that day, knew where to get help. She knew all about nearby therapy and community resources, and knew all about violence in the home. She estimated that domestic violence was the root cause of about 95 percent of the hundreds of cases that crossed her desk each year, some as seemingly simple as student absenteeism.

The child in question would have missed school, but it was to stay home and protect the mother,” Ms. Dominguez said in an interview. “Or they would be getting bad grades, but it was because they were so worried they could not concentrate.”

The episode gave Ms. Dominguez the idea of recruiting salons to help fight domestic abuse. Since then, the city has trained 116 stylists at 19 salons across Washington Heights and Inwood. Most were familiar with the problem; at the Tauro Unisex Salon, one of the first beauty shops to sign up, a stylist was killed right out front by a jealous lover in 2004.

The plan is to reach all of the roughly 400 salons in the neighborhood in the next four years. “We love our salons up here,” Ms. Dominguez said. “By our research, we have one on every block on the main avenues.”

The point of the training is not to turn stylists into law enforcement officials, but to teach them how to identify victims and let them know their options.

The message was hammered home at a recent mid-morning training session at the Divas Unisex Hair Salon, a 10-chair shop on Dyckman Street in Inwood. Karina Vargas, a social worker, set up a projector on a counter between vases of orchids, flashing slides on the red walls as the stylists, all speaking Spanish, snacked on doughnuts and casually offered up abuse stories.

Ms. Florentino worked on a client’s hair as she told shared the story of the woman with cigarette burns on her temples. She spoke through a translator, as did all the other stylists. Never pausing from unrolling curlers, then tugging hair out under the hiss of the dryer, she said she had grown impatient and told the woman that if she would not listen to her warnings, she should stop coming there to get her hair done. And the woman stopped coming.

Over the drone of the dryer, Ms. Vargas gently explained that turning the woman away was probably the wrong move. Instead, she suggested patiently offering advice on resources like domestic-violence shelters. “She is the professional in her own relationship,” she said. “Only she knows when to leave.”

Next time, Ms. Florentino said, she would handle it differently.

Suddenly, her client, Aida Sosa, stood up to admire her hair and, in a puff of hairspray, burst out with her own story. “When my children were small, I was verbally abused,” she said. “I had to get out of it in my own time.”

Sonia Nieves, the owner of Sonia’s Beauty Center on 180th Street in Washington Heights, said she had already seen results since the trainers visited in February. The material about domestic violence that child welfare gives her to pass out, including phone numbers for resources like nearby safe houses and counseling, disappears quickly.

She said she has intervened with a client who said her husband punched her in front of their children. After Ms. Nieves gave her the information about available services, the woman called recently to say things were getting better. Ms. Nieves said she was unsure whether the client had left her husband or was working it out at home.

“I will find out when she comes in to get her hair done,” she said.

Readers C omments: http://community.nytimes.com/article/comments/2008/11/20/nyregion/20salons.html

January is Stalking Awareness Month

Posted on January 20, 2009 by Savvy Group

Know it. Name it. Stop it.

Stalking is a violent crime! Stalking is willful, malicious, and repeated following or harassing or making credible threats with intent of placing another person in reasonable fear. Most of the people who are stalked know their stalker and most stalking goes unreported. This is a serious and dangerous crime. If you think you are being stalked, REPORT IT! How do you know if you're being stalked? What behaviors are indicative of stalking? What should you do if you are being stalked? To learn more about stalking, visit http://www.stalkingawarenessmonth.org/ or our website http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy

Gender Differences in Perceptions of Sexual Intent

Posted on December 02, 2008 by Savvy Group

Gender Differences in Perceptions of Sexual Intent: A Qualitative Review and Integration (Summarized)

Kristen P. Lindgren, Michele R. Parkhill, William H. George, and Christian S. Hendershot

The article discusses findings of various studies dealing with gender differences in perceptions of sexual intent. There are socio-cultural concerns over the belief that flirting by a woman is indicative of interest in sexual activity. Does a woman with a reputation of being flirtatious imply that she is probably interested in sexual activity? This belief is important to know about gender differences in sexual intent perceptions.

The first ever sexual intent study was done by Abbey in 1982. In this study the unacquainted female and male interactants were given the task of getting to know one another in a five minute conversation. During this interaction another male and female were observing and had the task of rating the interaction. Abbey’s hypothesis was “men as compared to women, perceive more sexuality in female targets.” After the session, both the raters and the interactants gave estimates of the target’s (woman) behavior. The study found that male raters and interactants perceived higher sexual intent from the female than did the female rater and interactant. Males also saw more sexual intent in the male than did females. Abbey concluded that males have a general bias toward an over perception of sexual behaviors, and this was not limited to female targets. Studies support that more sexually coercive men attribute more sexual intent behind women’s behavior than do non-coercive men. Moreover, women with a history of sexual victimization report being misperceived by a man more often, and men with a history of sexual perpetration report misperceiving a women’s friendliness more often.

In another study done in 1993 by Kowalski, participants were asked to imagine different behavioral scenarios occurring on a date and estimate the degree of interest in having sex such behaviors reflected, or “assessing each behavior’s sexual connotativeness.” From these ratings two sets of ratings were made. One was the female targets engaging in the behaviors and the other was the male targets engaging in the behavior. The male ratings of females were higher than women’s for females were for 20/27 behaviors. The male ratings of other males were higher than women’s for males for 12/27 behaviors. There was no gender difference in ratings for 13 of the 27 behaviors. From these, three factors emerged: mundane, romantic and sexual behaviors. Mundane behaviors are those commonly identified in literature as being either platonic affection or romantic or sexual intentions; for example, maintaining eye contact or giving compliments. These types of behaviors were the most different in gender ratings. Overtly sexual behaviors had the least difference in gender ratings. Men and women perceive friendly and seductive behavior similarly; these behaviors are the ones that show the most gender difference in perceptions. Additionally, some studies found that women judged less sexual intent in male interactions than the males did in their own behavior, illustrating the incongruence in gender perceptions of sexual intent.

Another important factor to consider is the situational influence of alcohol on perceptions of sexual intent. Multiple studies found that both “male and female raters perceived a drinking female target as more sexual, sexually available, and willing to engage in foreplay and sexual intercourse than a non-drinking target.” There are also alcohol expectancies and stereotypes about drinking that perpetuate this perception. However, even “being interested in pursuing sex or perceiving someone as interested in pursuing sex is not synonymous with agreeing to or consenting to engage in sex.” Do people view these two ideas as distinct?

Some explanations for gender differences in perception of sexual intent are described in the article encompassed by proximal, or immediate causes as well as distal, or ultimate causes. The proximal causes include social-information processing, social skills deficits and self presentation. Social-information processing is how an individual encodes information from a situation, interpret it and behave in that situation. It is believed that men as compared to women have a lower perceptual threshold for labeling behaviors as sexual. Because men and women’s thresholds are different, their labeling of behavior as sexual is also different. For example, if a man and woman both view the same behavior of a target which is actually 20% sexual in nature, the man with his lower threshold will see any display of 10% behavior as indicative of sexual interest, whereas the woman with her higher threshold will need it to be at least 30% to judge the behavior as sexual interest. So the man views the 20% as sexual interest, whereas the woman does not. Another study found that sexual interpretations may be automatically activated and more rapidly so in men. This means that in men the concept of sex would activate rapidly, creating a perception of a higher percentage of sexual interest in female targets’ behavior and men would therefore label her as sexually interested. On the contrary, women’s concept of sex would develop more slowly, making them perceive sexual behavior at a lower percentage and they would not label the target as sexually interested. A final aspect of social-information processing to consider is sexualized schemata. Men have more sexualized expectations in general and more sexualized schemas about women. Events and behaviors used to indicate both friendly and sexual intentions are likely interpreted as it confirms to a sexualized schema. Then these events and behaviors that fit the schema are better remembered than those that do not. Men perceive mundane behaviors as more sexual than do women. Another explanation offered is that of social skills. The article states that men are less socially skilled than women and social skills are negatively related to the ratings of female targets’ sexual intentions. Finally, self-presentation is suggested as an explanation for differences in perception of sexual intent, however, there was not satisfactory evidence of gender differences based on this.

The distal causes of gender differences in perception of sexual intent are socialization, evolutionary psychology and biology. Socialization is the cultural expectations that dictate that men should initiate sexual encounters and be “‘forceful, aggressive and dominant’ lovers”. Evolutionary psychology believes that men and women differ in assessing sexual intentions because they differ in their natural selection pressures. From an evolutionary standpoint, men do not have to make a parental investment to pass on their genes; therefore there are advantages to having many mates. It is less costly in men’s genetic fitness to have a bias in perceiving women as more sexually interested than it is for them to view them as less so. Biology views gender differences in their baseline sexual arousal as accounting for differences in sexual perceptions. Men have a higher baseline level linked to “sexually related social perceptions.” Men assume women have similar “sexual appetites” and project their desires onto women. Biology also suggests testosterone may be a mechanism for this difference as free testosterone increases over baseline when a man socially interacts with a woman.

The article covers findings of various studies dealing with gender differences in perceptions of sexual intent. It gives us information on possible causes of the differences in men and women’s perceptions of sexual intent. However, the article does not take a stance on how harmful these misperceptions can be. Does a woman with a reputation of being flirtatious imply that she is probably interested in sexual activity? The belief that flirting by a woman is indicative of interest in sexual activity perpetuates such misperceptions and can lead to unwanted sexual advances or even sexual assault. What can we do to ensure our perceptions of others’ behaviors are accurate?

Welcome!

Posted on November 13, 2008 by Savvy Group

SAVVY! (Students Against vViolence, Yes!) is an organization at the University of South Dakota which aims to educate students and community members about the prevention of sexual assault, intimate partner violence, and stalking. We do not see men as potential perpetrators but rather as allies. We do not see women as potential victims but rather as allies. We focus on having men and women alike work together to stop violence against women. To join SAVVY! or to obtain more information visit our website at http://orgs.usd.edu/savvy/.

Through our blog we hope to facilitate meaningful discussion regarding violence. We invite everyone to make comments and ask questions! Please submit related articles or start a new discussion via email; we will post them to the blog! We encourage contributions to the blog and are excited to get input from USD students about the important topics of intimate partner violence, sexual assault and stalking. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us at savvy@usd.edu.

Happy blogging,

Megan Knips and Karen Wall