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Racism, Class and Masculinity:
The
Global Dimensions of Gender-Based Violence CSW 2001 Panel Sponsored by
Friday,
9 March 2000, 11am to 1pm
UN
Dag Hammarskjold Auditorium
INSTRAW and UNICEF are
hosting a panel to discuss the interface between racism, class and men’s
violence against women. The panelists will address issues such as how structural
pressures and cultural norms affect men’s socialization into violence, how
these pressures and norms vary across groups, time and place, and what
recommendations are there for combating these processes. Opening Statement: Eleni
Stamiris, Director-INSTRAW Film Screening – “I Am A Man: Black Masculinity in America” by Byron
Hurt
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| Partners in Change: Working with Men to End Gender-Based Violence |
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The
papers in this volume explore the different kinds of partnerships for ending
gender-based violence, and men's roles and responsibilities within these.
These roles in and responsibilities for change range across the spectrum,
from men changing their relationships with their intimate partners to
male-dominated institutions changing the way they function in order to
better confront issues of gender and violence. Some of the individual,
institutional and structural changes that are required are discussed in this
volume, as are ways in which men can become partners, with each other and
with women, in making these changes.
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Background of Speakers for
‘Racism, Class and Masculinities: The Global Dimension of Gender Based
Violence’.
Byron Hurt,
Byron Hurt is the former quarterback of the Northeastern University football team and is the producer of the award-winning documentary film, I Am A Man: Black Masculinity in America. I Am A Man features the voices of black men from various socio-economic backgrounds, along with interviews with some of Black America’s most celebrated progressive academics, social critics and authors. The result is an engaging, candid dialogue on black masculine identity in contemporary U.S. society.
Ruth Hayward,
author of the recent
book Breaking the Earthenware Jar – Lessons form South Asia to End Violence
against Women and Girls. Ruth Hayward will discuss her experience in
bringing men together who have worked towards ending male violence in the South
Asia region.
Matthew Gutmann,
Anthropologist and author of
numerous publications on identity and masculinities in Latin America, including
the widely acclaimed The Meanings of Being Macho: Being a Man in Mexico City.
Working with incorporating men into gender and development. Mr. Gutmann
will discuss the part played by culture in gender based violence in Latin
America, as well as pointing out how this type of violence includes both
violence by men against women and against other men.
Alan Greig
Mr. Grieg is an independent consultant, working at
the intersections of HIV prevention, harm reduction and gender equality.
For the past 10 years, Alan has worked with non governmental and community-based
organizations in countries of the economic North and South to locate HIV
prevention and harm reduction programs within a broader agenda of social
justice. As a white, straight, northern European middle class male, Alan
is confronted with the tensions between privilege and justice, identity and
community, and the margin and the center. He draws inspiration from the
writings of Gilles Deleuze, Gayatri Spivak and Adam Phillips, and from the
struggle against all those who seek "to again take the world from us."
Diana Mahabir Wyatt,
Has spent 25 years working in the field of domestic violence through counseling, supporting victims, providing shelter and advocacy. Furthermore she worked for 11 years in the Trinidadian senate making laws to protect women and children and to counter-act institutional social violence in other ways. Diana Mahibir Wyatt is currently the chair of the Tirinidad Tobago Coalition Against Domestic Violence. She will bring in her extensive experience in this field, concentrating on the Caribbean culture.