31 Things British Columbia Can Do Right Now to End Violence Against Women
23. Work with the anti-violence sector to develop training for all first responders and decision-makers
Everyone who works with women in an official capacity, including judges, social workers, lawyers, and police should undertake training that is developed in conjunction with anti-violence organizations and is delivered in person rather than online. Given the power that professionals from judges, to social workers to police, have to make decisions that affect a woman’s life and safety, they require a deep understanding of dynamics of power and control, as well as the cycle of staying, leaving and returning, that often characterize abusive relationships. They must also understand the theory and practice of culturally-appropriate, woman-centered safety planning.
Women in British Columbia have waited too long already. That is why we are offering 31 things that BC’s new Provincial Office of Domestic Violence (PODV) can push for right now to increase safety for women and to bring us closer than we have ever been to ending violence against women once and for all. We are calling for 31 social, economic and legal changes, none of which are unachievable in this province. Some would require very little financial investment, and each of them will save resources in the long term given the high costs of violence against women.
For more information:
Jane Doe Advocates – 31 Things British Columbia can do Right Now to End Violence Against Women
Follow The Violence Against Women in Relationship Act – 2. Audit for compliance with BC’s Violence Against Women in Relationship policy
3. Address the immediate financial and housing needs of women fleeing violence
5. Make addressing women’s inequality a core learning objective for all BC students
6. Add sexual violence by police to the mandate of the Independent Investigations Office
7. Address the feminization of poverty with a provincial anti-poverty plan
8. Push to add gender and sex to the hate crime provisions of Canada’sCriminal Code
9. Bring back regional coordination committees for women’s safety
10. Join the call for a national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women
11. Do not let immigration status stand in the way of women’s safety
12. Value the expertise of women’s organizations by investing in their work
13. Make women’s safety the first priority in police response
15. Train and support specialized Crown Counsel for cases involving gender violence
17. Increase access to gender appropriate drug treatment and harm reduction services
18. Monitor and evaluate the implementation and interpretation of BC’s new Family Law Act
19. Hold offenders accountable for impacts on children of violence against women
20. Take action on women-blaming and women-shaming in all its forms
21. Do not force abused women in to parenting programs or counseling
22. Get perpetrators of violence against women in front of the courts quickly
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