«Para o secretário-geral da ONU, António Guterres, a violência contra as mulheres estão “entre as violações de direitos humanos mais horríveis, persistentes e generalizadas do mundo.”
Em todo o mundo, uma em cada três mulheres e meninas é vítima de algum tipo de agressão. Esta segunda-feira, 25 de novembro, marca o Dia Internacional para a Eliminação da Violência contra as Mulheres. (...)». Continue a ler e a ver.
E do site da UN Women:
«(...)
3. Redefine masculinity.
Take a critical look at what masculinity means to you and how you embody it. Self-reflection, community conversations, and artistic expression are just some of the tools available for men and boys (as well as women and girls) to examine and redefine masculinities with feminist principles.
4. Stop victim-blaming.
Because language is deeply embedded in culture, we may forget that the words and phrases we use each day shape our reality.
Rape-affirming beliefs are embedded in our language: “She was dressed like a slut. She was asking for it,”
It is part of popular song lyrics: “I know you want it.”
It is normalized by objectifying women and calling them names in pop culture and media.
You have the power to choose to leave behind language and lyrics that blame victims, objectify women and excuse sexual harassment. What a woman is wearing, what and how much she had to drink, and where she was at a certain time, is not an invitation to rape her. (...)». Leia na integra.
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