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Thinking about Social Change and Resistance

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To examine some approaches to power and social change. To explore issues concerning ... Oppressive power is still possible, but individuals are not passive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thinking about Social Change and Resistance


1
Thinking about Social Change and Resistance
  • Sue Dyson

2
Objectives
  • To examine some approaches to power and social
    change
  • To explore issues concerning resistance to change
  • To explore how individuals and organisations can
    be supported through the change process

3
Questions
  • What are the desired outcomes of your change
    interventions?
  • Where do you focus your efforts?
  • How will you know you have been successful?

4
Models of power
  • Power-over
  • Hierarchical Power is possessed, flows from
    above to below from a centralised source, and is
    primarily repressive
  • Those who possess power oppress those who do not
    have it
  • Based on universal truths (men strong/women
    weak

5
Power-To
  • Power-to
  • Neither positive or negative, but circulates in
    networks
  • Oppressive power is still possible, but
    individuals are not passive
  • Where there is power there will be resistance.

6
Social Change
  • Primary prevention of violence against women
  • Many models of change/violence prevention
  • Shared common principles

7
US Violence Prevention Programs
  • Aimed at men on college (university) campuses and
    prompted by three insights
  • prevention efforts must address men because
    largely it is men who perpetrate this violence
  • constructions of masculinity play a crucial role
    in shaping sexual assault and domestic violence
    and
  • men have a positive role to play in helping to
    stop violence against women.

8
Social Psychology
  • Concerned with the study of mental processes and
    structures which mediate the dialectical
    relationship between stimuli and behaviour.

9
Behaviour Change Theories
  • Elaboration Likelihood Model
  • Lasting change occurs when participants are
    motivated to hear a message, able to understand
    it and perceive the message is relevant to them
  • Comparison between passive, interactive and no
    interventions found that interactive were the
    most effective but not sustained.
  • Intervention a video.

10
Social Ecological Model
  • The issue of violence against women is one of
    culture and environment, rather than one of
    psychological or biological deficits in
    individuals.
  • Used in schools to develop alternatives to
    traditional models of masculinity
  • Capacity building, group empowerment, community
    building and culture change interdependent.

11
Social Norms Approach
  • The majority culture may support an individuals
    beliefs and behaviours.
  • Social marketing a tool for change.
  • Aim to shift mens perception of social norms by
    revealing the extent to which other men disagree
    or are uncomfortable with traditional attitudes
    towards women.
  • Men consistently under-estimate the importance
    other men and women place on consent in sexual
    activity and the willingness of most men to
    intervene against sexual violence.

12
The Community of Responsibility Model
  • Based on the premise that everyone in a community
    has a role to play in ending violence against
    women.
  • Aims to teach individuals how to intervene safely
    and effectively in incidents of sexual violence
    before, during and after they have occurred with
    strangers, acquaintances or friends.
  • Bystander interventions and helping behaviour
    based on this model

13
Stages of Change Model
  • Suggests that behaviour change is a process, and
    that at any given time individuals are at
    different levels of readiness for change.
  • Different people at different points in the
    process of change can benefit from different
    interventions.
  • Five stages of change suggested

14
Five stages of change
  • Pre-contemplation individuals aware of the issue
    but need information
  • Contemplation individuals need help to move
    awareness to action
  • Decision/determination people ready to act but
    need a plan
  • Action people who are already taking action need
    positive feedback and social support
  • Maintenance ongoing reinforcement necessary to
    maintain behaviour change.

15
Common Principles
  • Violence against women is a social issue
  • Must be addressed at all levels of society
  • Interventions with men are an important adjunct
    to wider social change strategies
  • Men should be approached as bystanders or
    witnesses to violence, not as potential
    perpetrators
  • Programs must address readiness for change

16
Readiness for change
  • Readiness for change may sit anywhere between
    passive indifference and active intervention
  • Strategies
  • Identify norms and values
  • Develop skills for example how to intervene
  • Define the difference between consent and
    coercion
  • Participants must be able to understand messages
    and be motivated to participate.

17
Different approaches
  • For those who have little recognition of issues
    concerning sexual assault empathy induction
  • For those interested in behaviour change
    bystander interventions
  • To foster peer relations bystander intervention
    and social norms approach

18
Minimising defensiveness
  • Many men feel blamed for male violence
  • Some programs have found that defensiveness is
    diminished by approaching men as partners in
    violence prevention
  • Leadership role in ending sexism and promoting a
    healthy sexual environment emphasised

19
BUT resistance may be a good sign
  • Any work that challenges the status quo and
    brings unspoken issues into the open is likely to
    increase attempts to resist changes.

20
Minimising defensiveness
  • Create safe, non-judgemental environment
  • Use male facilitators
  • Use inclusive pronouns (we, us)
  • Hear mens perception of being blamed or
    denigrated
  • Acknowledge that men can also be victims of
    violence
  • Assert that most violence experienced by men is
    from other men.

21
Effective prevention programs.
  • Comprehensive address and involve all relevant
    community members and systems
  • Intensive offering learning opportunities that
    are interactive, participatory, sustained over
    time and have multiple points of contact with
    reinforcing messages.

22
Five features (cont)
  • Address cognitive (thinking), affective (feeling)
    and behavioural domains. ie. what people know,
    how they feel and how they behave.
  • Relevant to the audience
  • Tailored to needs and readiness
  • Acknowledge special concerns
  • Focus on peer related variables
  • Use peers in leadership roles
  • Emphasise the relationship between sexual assault
    and other issues.

23
Five features (cont)
  • Positive messages build on mens values and
    assumed predisposition to act in a positive
    manner (i.e. the bystander approach)

24
Positive and lasting change
  • Intensive and lengthy education programs produce
    positive and lasting change in mens attitudes.
  • Semester-long university course designed to train
    peer facilitators to conduct rape education
    compared to students in a human sexuality course.
  • Rape education program resulted in positive
    attitude change, and two years later the
    participants were still less accepting of rape
    myths than those in the human sexuality course
    (Lonsway et al. 1998).
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