Domestic violence online community launches webinar series
By Courage Network

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Domestic violence online community launches webinar series
CourageNetwork.com, an online community for domestic violence survivors, launches webinar series open to public
National/International – March 4, 2011 – CourageNetwork.com will host monthly webinars about the topic of domestic violence and safety of survivors. Advocates working with family violence will be featured presenters in the webinar series that is available free of charge to the public. “This webinar series is a way to get critical information out to the general public. We’re continuing our efforts to reach a larger audience with similar valuable information that is being offered from other organizations' seminars that may not be readily accessible to the public ” says Lyn Twyman, creator of CourageNetwork.com and family violence survivor, "The goal is to equip people with information about this issue that is claiming the lives of countless throughout the world."
The webinar series will launch on March 17 at 7pm ET, 4pm PT with the topic of “Building Community Collaborations”. This webinar which will be hosted by Lyn Twyman, who is also a non-profit consultant, will be designed for organizations and activists who want to have successful domestic violence non-profits. Other webinar subjects that will be covered are sexual assault, teen dating violence and the family courts.
Anyone interested in registering for the first CourageNetwork.com webinar on March 17th may register at the following link: http://www.freebinar.com/PIID=EE53D88985. If you are interested in being a presenter in future webinars, you may email courage (AT) couragenetwork (DOT) com with your topic and credentials.
About Courage Network
Created in early 2010, CourageNetwork.com is an international online community for domestic violence survivors, advocates and organizations. Courage Network provides survivors with resources and a sense of community, coming together, united and open to all people affected by family violence by tackling the various facets of the issue. Courage Network features interviews with survivors, authors, advocates and leaders in the movement to assist victims of domestic violence. Past featured guests have included Tony Porter, Victor Rivers, Judge Lynn Toler and Love Is Respect.
Contact Info:
Courage Network
info (AT) couragenetwork (DOT) com
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The Power of Media
By Courage NetworkThe Power of Media
Originally posted at Time's UpCourage Network PSA - We Must All Work Together from Courage Network on Vimeo.
">Courage Network PSA - We Must All Work Together from Courage Network on Vimeo.
The Importance of Using Accountable Language
By Courage NetworkFiled under Ending Men's Violence, Paper.
by Phyllis B. Frank and Barry Goldstein
This article was conceived because of the frequency with which leaders of our movement and presenters at conferences use unaccountable language in our presentations and proposals, even as they deeply care about ending men’s violence against women and have devoted their lives to helping women partnered with abusive men.
Like all tools of oppression, unaccountable language is conditioned into our psyches, taught and learned as appropriate vocabulary and in socially acceptable sentence structure. Thus, unaccountable language is part of everyday parlance of people acting in complete good faith in trying to end men's violence against women. We know this is true because as long as we have trained to avoid unaccountable language, we still sometimes make this error, as well. The movement to end domestic violence has not yet made the use of accountable language a priority. We hope this article will encourage all of us in the movement to do so. This is one program we can afford even in tight economic times.
Defining unaccountable language
Unaccountable
language refers to the powerful messages embedded in all forms
of speech and media that have all of us lapse into sentence
structure that obscures perpetrators, minimizes their abuse,
and supports blaming victims. One common example is the phrase
“an abusive relationship." The relationship did not hit the
woman, but rather it was the abuser, typically a man who is
husband or intimate partner, who was abusive. Such statements
make the person who committed the offense, invisible. More
specifically it is the use of passive language that results in
making the perpetrator invisible. For example, a phrase like a
woman was raped should be replaced by, “A man raped a woman.”
The rape did not just happen, but rather the rapist committed a
brutal act. The idea is to focus attention on the person
responsible. Accountably speaking we might say a woman was in a
relationship with an abuser or he is abusive to his intimate
partner. Another example is exposed by the question, “How many
women will be raped or assaulted in this year?” Do we ever
hear, “How many men will rape or assault this year?”
Other examples of the language of accountability
Once, when discussing accountable language during a staff
training, we looked up on the wall to see a bumper sticker that
said, "Every 15 seconds a woman is assaulted." Our objection at
the time was not with the accuracy of the information but that
the statement failed to focus on the cause of these assaults.
"Every 15 seconds a man assaults a woman!" would be an
accountable description.
During a dinner conversation, Barry, and his partner, Sharon, were discussing a series of disastrous calamities in their home caused by the builder who seemed to have deliberately sabotaged their house. After hearing about one emergency repair after another, Phyllis said it was the first time she actually understood the true meaning of an “abusive home“, since too often the phrase "abusive home" is misused to invisiblize a man who repeatedly abuses his partner in their home.
The
police and media often refer to incidents in which a man
brutalizes his wife or girl friend as a "domestic dispute."
This describes a man's criminal assault as if it were some kind
of mutual problem, even-sided engagement, or tame dispute,
rather than an act of brutality. When a mugger assaults and
robs a cab driver, it is not described as a "fare
dispute."
Unaccountable language hides responsibility
The use of accountable language is not a technicality or merely
a play on words, but rather an issue with profound social
consequences. The systemic use of unaccountable language
minimizes men's abuse of women, fails to take his abuse
seriously, and hides his responsibility for his actions. If we
say "a woman was hurt" it seems like it just happened, as if on
its own accord, or by accident, and there is nothing to be done
about it. If instead we refer to the man who is hurting the
woman, this requires assigning responsibility and taking action
to stop him from hurting her again and provide consequences for
the harm he caused.
Domestic violence is comprised of a wide range of tactics used by men to maintain power and to control their intimate partners The tactics are part of a pattern of coercive actions designed to maintain, what he believes (consciously or not), are his male privileges, to control his significant other. Historically, men were assigned, by social and legal norms, control over wives and families. Today, even though that is no longer legally, and for so many, morally, the case, an "abusive relationship" or "domestic dispute" makes it seem like a communications or relationship problem between the parties. It suggests counseling or therapy as a remedy instead of consequences to hold abusers accountable for abusive, controlling, and/or violent tactics.
Social
Consequences of unaccountable language
As a society our constant use of unaccountable language gives
still another advantage to abusers. Unaccountable language,
embedded in all dominant institutions, including the judicial
system, leads police, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and
judges in domestic violence custody cases to confidently assume
that both parties share equal blame for not getting along. They
often tell the parties they are equally responsible for the
problems in the relationship and they must start to cooperate,
get therapy, or anger management classes. When a mother
attempts to protect her children or limit contact with an
abusive father, she is routinely blamed for not getting along
rather than recognized for what is a normal reaction to a
partner's abuse.
If we are going to end or at least reduce the use of unaccountable language in this society, those of us working in the battered women's movement must take the lead and must set an example to use accountable language. Politicians often use phrases like "mistakes were made" Instead of saying, “I made a mistake.” We want society to be clear that men ,who abuse and mistreat the women they are partnered with, are responsible for their actions. We are asking presenters and others working to end domestic violence to join us in striving to use accountable language.
Dedication
Dedicated to our dear friend and colleague Jon Cohen, who worked with Phyllis B. Frank in developing the NY model for Batterers Programs, and with Barry Goldstein, to find many of the examples of unaccountable language in Barry’s first book, Scared to Leave Afraid to Stay.
Phyllis
B. Frank, pbfrank@vcs-inc.org, www.nymbp.org
Barry Goldstein, Barryg78@aol.com, www.civicresearchinstitute.com/dvac.html
Scholarship/Grant Help for College
By L.A.The Women's Opportunity Awards, Soroptimist's major service project, was established by Soroptimist International of the Americas in 1972 to assist women entering or re-entering the workforce in obtaining the education and skills training they need to improve their employment status. Women's Opportunity Awards are designed to give women who provide the primary source of financial support for their families the opportunity to achieve their career goals—an opportunity they have not previously had, whether because of economic or social barriers, or personal circumstances. These awards are for women who are attending, or have been accepted to, a vocational/skills training program, or an undergraduate degree program. Women's Opportunity Awards are cash awards that recipients may use for any expenses related to their educational pursuits. These include tuition and books, housing, child care and transportation. These awards are not scholarships. The program begins at the community level, where award amounts vary. Local winners then become eligible to receive region–level awards. Every year, 28 geographic regions throughout North, Central and South America, and Asia each grant one $5,000 first–place award, and some regions give additional $3,000 awards. These 28 first–place winners become eligible to receive one of three $10,000 finalist awards. CURRENT DEADLINE: Dec. 1 2010
Raise the Nation has three Scholarship/Grant Awards you can apply for.
* Continuing Education Scholarship (pdf document)
* Student Loan Grant (pdf document)
* Child of a Single Parent Women Scholarship (pdf document)
More information on each of these including help paying back student loans via this program can be found here: Raise the Nation Scholarships & Grants
Deadlines and disbursement dates for the next two cycles are as follows: Fall 2010 Application deadline: August 1, 2010 Expected disbursement: September 30, 2010 Spring 2010 Application deadline: December 1, 2010 Expected disbursement: January 30, 2011
Additional Scholarships/Grants for Domestic Violence Victims Survivors:
The R.O.S.E. Fund (nomination only & has to be done by an advocate or organization on your behalf)
What you should know is the R.O.S.E. Fund helps with many other expenses such as The ROSE Fund Reconstructive Surgery Program, The ROSE Fund Research & Report Card Program for communities & The Rose Fund Award for organizations or one outstanding individual such as advocates for their achievements in helping self esteem to women of domestic violence. Read more Here.
Don't forget to always check the NEED BASED PROGRAMS that your local State Educational Grants offer. ;-)
Those advertisements for Single Moms go back to school ...there is a catch to those. Most are strickly for ONLINE college. If that works for you great.
Sometimes the offer up colleges giving the option of online & campus or just campus. What they don't tell you is some will ask for $ to get the information. Some will not let you chose your own school YOU want to attend. These sites are strickly pushing colleges that pay them to promote them for gaining more students. So your only going to get their list of colleges & yours might not even be on that list. Something they don't tell you.
If you know of anymore scholarship, grants, programs or those that sponsor DV women to go back to school post it in comments so others will know. Including myself as I am still in search for tuition help through grants, sponsors & scholarships. Because I was recently accpeted to a great college which now might just be a dream if tuition is accomplished. :-( So far, yet so far away.
In all, know this, YOU CAN MAKE A CHANGE for a better future regardless of what has happened in your life after domestic violence. You owe it to yourself & your children if you have them to prove that good does come out of bad as well as setting a good example for them.
Courage Network is just a stepping stone for all that is out there & if we all continue to post helpful information here, it will soon help many others in finding what they need without all the internet searching & hoping that the some of the programs out there have what they need.
Sometimes it all boils down to how you ask & what you ask for to obtain any information on programs available. Believe it or not some programs don't know about some of the other options out there. Reason why they are finding Courage Network a good place as well for information. For college now you have some information to help your goal of returning to school. I hope this helps. I'll keep adding as I find things.
Remember if you know of any other existing scholarships, grants, aid or businesses/organizations that sponsor DV women going back to college & needing tuition help...PLEASE POST IT!
Telling Amy's Story
By Courage Network
The other night I had the opportunity
to attend the official screening of Telling Amy's
Story, a documentary that was created by PennState Public
Broadcasting with funding cooperation from the Verizon
Foundation. The documentary recounts the years of
events in a timeline
leading up
to the tragic murder of a domestic violence victim named Amy.
I will not give the movie away but it lets the viewers know how
many times family and friends tried to intervene, how the criminal
and judicial system triumphed and also failed in helping Amy and
how Amy tried to fight for her own safety. Though Amy's death
occurred several years ago, unfortunately much of what occurred
during her life is still happening today to victims all across the
U.S.Walking away from the film gave me a few perspectives that I want to share. First, it gave me hope because now we have a progressive, instrumental media tool that can be used to show the reality of what victims are going through today. Second, it serves as a great resource for organizations and communities across the U.S. to see what they can do to better serve victims. If you have not watched the trailer, you can do so at http://telling.psu.edu/.
Please encourage your local PBS station to bring this awareness documentary to your city or town. Also look at ways to bring model programming to your community to help victims if none currently exist. Telling Amy's Story is a movie that is not just about a woman named Amy, it's a story about a woman, man or child with any given name, any race, any background who is affected by domestic violence.

