Violence against women is a men's issue

Content warning: the following post discusses male violence (including sexual violence)聽against women.

It鈥檚 Safer Campus Community Week, a chance to reflect on the 成人大片鈥檚 commitment to providing a safe and respectful environment for its students.

Unfortunately, in the wake of two recent events which have sparked global outrage, I am left wondering how we can hope to create a safe and respectful聽environment聽at a time when we are experiencing a global epidemic of violence against one of our most vulnerable groups: women.

33-year-old Sarah Everard disappeared on March 3, while walking home from a friend鈥檚 house in South London.

Two days later, on the other side of the world, in Adelaide, 21-year-old Jasmeen Kaur disappeared after finishing a shift at the aged care centre where she worked.

On the one hand, you could say that these events bear little resemblance: Ms Everard was in her 30s, Ms Kaur in her 20s; Ms Everard was walking down the street at the time of her abduction; Ms Kaur was in a carpark; Ms Everard鈥檚 body was found in a woodland area in Kent, approximately 90 kilometres south-east of London, Ms Kaur鈥檚 body was found in a shallow grave at Flinders Ranges; the man charged with Ms Everard鈥檚 alleged murder is聽48 year's old (and a police constable); the man charged with Ms Kaur鈥檚 alleged murder is just聽20.聽

But there is one important truth at the centre of both stories: the victims are women, and their deaths are at the hands of men.

These stories are yet another reminder of the universal fear that women share. We might also call it a fear of the unknown 鈥 fear of what lurks in the dark and in the footsteps behind us. It鈥檚 the same fear we鈥檝e been living with all of our lives, since our parents and teachers told us to never speak to strangers or approach a car we don鈥檛 recognise. Fear of the unknown, fear of the stranger 鈥 it鈥檚 all the same thing: fear of men.

From a young age, women are given tips on how to protect ourselves from male predators, both in and outside of the home:聽wear your hair down, wear flat shoes, hold onto your keys, don鈥檛 take the shortcut, don鈥檛 walk at night, lock your doors, scream, kick as hard as you can, run, run, run. These words have shaped our existence, our ability to trust, our ability to be carefree, to live without a shadow; a constant, invisible presence hanging from our coattails.

I sometimes wonder how men see women: the men who walk past us on a quiet street, who drive our Ubers and taxis, who serve us at a bar, who stand behind us in a lift, who wait at the same train station, who drive alongside us. Perhaps some of them go to efforts to indicate that they pose no threat, though I expect most of them don鈥檛 even think about it.

And after all, why should they? Too often, the traumatic experiences that women share in an attempt to make people care are deemed as being a 鈥渨omen鈥檚 issue鈥; it鈥檚 our problem to endure and to solve. However, Chris Hemmings, a journalist, author, and activist, to argue that, to create meaningful change, we need to reframe the discussion as one that is not about women, it's about men.聽

Of course, not all men rape women. For the most part, the problem is less about the individual and more about 鈥渢he collective socialisation of men that has led to some men becoming predatory and harmful to women.鈥 Nonetheless, we have to accept that, in Australia, , and that, on average, .

So, sure, says Hemmings, it鈥檚 not all men, 鈥渂ut more often than not it is a man that is perpetrating these crimes.鈥 Therefore, 鈥渋t鈥檚 about what we, as men, can do to prevent our brothers from ending up as one of those awful statistics.鈥

In Hemmings鈥 view, the solution is clear: 鈥渨e have to start instilling empathy into young men early,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ecause we know there is an empathy gap between boys and girls by age of 13 or 14.鈥

It's a slow process, and ultimately, not one that women can achieve alone. It's time for men鈥攐ur brothers, fathers, partners, friends, teachers, and colleagues鈥攖o step up. We'll be waiting.聽

Resources

You can report an incident (to the University or the police) here.

Further support (including counselling) to help deal with an incident is available here.

Tagged in What messes with your head, Wellbeing, mental health, health and wellbeing, women