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2.8: H. Activist Suggestions and Examples

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    47599
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    H. Activist Suggestions and Examples

    GROUP ASSIGNMENT: Brainstorm ways the average citizen can help put a stop to domestic violence. Begin within their homes, expand to their communities, their states, their nation, and finally, globally. Try to have each student come up with a different way to help.

    To minimize the amount of domestic violence in our communities there are things we can do and actions we can support as volunteers and voters. In our personal lives we can lead by example and model non-abusive relationships. As citizens we need to hold abusers accountable and not minimize abusive behavior. Additional efforts also need to be made to educate in schools by using videos, handouts and small group discussions related to issues such as self-esteem, media violence, conflict resolution and gender roles. Financial and personnel support should be provided to groups to help victims and youth deal with the issues mentioned previously.

    We can also examine our and other relationships, and encourage others to do the same, as we look for warning signs of potential abuse within ourselves or others. Though it is not always easy to predict violent or abusive behavior, these warning signs provide some indication. Watch out for individuals who:

    • ignore you when you speak
    • talk over you
    • cross or violate your personal boundaries
    • call you names or make accusations
    • expect you to alter your way of dress
    • try to persuade you with pleas or accusations if you resist their sexual advances
    • demonstrate a prejudice about gender, race, religion, ability, sexual orientation
    • have displayed violence or abuse against people, animals, objects or the earth
    • expect you to alter your free time and your activities because of their jealousy
    • demonstrate a lack of self‑esteem
    • expect you to yield to their desires
    • frighten you when they are angry
    • blame you for their behavior
    • drink heavily or abuse drugs

    Obviously, one or even more of these behaviors does not mean the person is a potential assailant. However, these traits and behaviors have been found in individuals who have been assailants (From CVIC literature).

    If an individual has been raised in a home or even a society in which battering existed, that person may not recognize that their behavior is destructive or abusive. To identify the potential for abuse, ask yourself the following questions:

    • Are you extremely jealous?
    • Do you control your partner's activities?
    • Do you use physical force to solve problems?
    • Do you believe that you are the head of the household and should not be challenged?

    If the answers to the above questions are true for you, then you are probably hurting the people you love and should get help from someone who will hold you accountable. Acknowledge that the abuse is your problem and have the courage to seek help.

    (Center for Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence, 1994).

    During class discussion, ask what further suggestions students have. How aware were they of teen dating violence when they were in high school or junior high? How active are they in their communities now? How active do they plan on being in the future?


    This page titled 2.8: H. Activist Suggestions and Examples is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Wendelin M. Hume.

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