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KNOWLEDGEHUB
Mobilising Communities

EMPLOYING COMMUNITY-BASED MOBILISATION PROGRAMMES TO ADDRESS VAWG

Community mobilisation programmes are often used to create enabling environments for work to prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG). Alongside activism, these programmes can help to transform harmful attitudes, beliefs, and norms that underlie this violence and gender inequality.

This page gives key resources and selected examples.

01 . Community mobilisation engages entire communities rather than just individuals

To achieve population-level impact, this approach

  • Typically engages volunteer ‘community activists’ who are trained and supported in informal activities to engage the communities where they live and/or work
  • Often involves working with service providers and with key religious, traditional, and opinion leaders
  • May include efforts to hold government or institutions accountable to create pressure for change or to ensure responsiveness to relevant policies and laws

SIMPLY DOING A LOT OF ACTIVITIES WITH A LOT OF PEOPLE…IS NOT COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION. THIS APPROACH REQUIRES CAREFULLY WORKING TO BUILD A ‘CRITICAL MASS’ OF COMMUNITY MEMBERS TO SUPPORT NON-VIOLENCE. IT ENCOURAGES COMMUNITY MEMBERS TO QUESTION THE STATUS QUO AND TO DISCUSS NEW IDEAS ABOUT HOW CHANGE HAPPENS ALL AROUND US, ALL THE TIME—IN OUR STREETS, HOMES, COMMUNITY GATHERINGS, PLACES OF WORSHIP, WORKPLACES AND INSTITUTIONS.

RAISING VOICES (2020)

02 The evidence is mixed on the effectiveness of community mobilisation programmes in reducing VAWG

Rigorous trials from low- and middle-income countries show that community mobilisation can be effective in reducing VAWG, shifting underlying social norms and empowering women within programmatic time frames. However, other community mobilisation interventions have had no impact on VAWG.

This suggests that impacts on safety and well-being depend on implementation quality and context. Several studies have noted that the programmes showing no impact failed to achieve the length or intensity of exposure normally required to shift norms and behaviours.

03 We have learned how to ensure more effective community mobilisation programmes

Key factors include:

  • Safe spaces for critical dialogue
  • Sufficient time and intensity for interacting
  • Contextually appropriate activities
  • Engagement of multiple stakeholders
  • Careful selection of community activists, followed by intensive skills training and ongoing mentoring

 

NOTE: Mobilising communities is a key strategy under both the United Nations framework to reduce violence against women (RESPECT) and the United Nations strategy to reduce violence against children (INSPIRE).

COMBAT

Taking community action to prevent and respond to violence in Ghana.

SASA!

Supporting communities to prevent IPV in Uganda and globally.

SHARE

Mobilising communities around HIV and violence prevention in Uganda.

SAFE

Improving Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights and Reducing IPV in Bangladesh.
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