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Focusing on Empowerment:

Date post: 22-Feb-2016
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Focusing on Empowerment: Lessons Learned from Working With Abused Women from Ethnocultural Communities Farishta Murzban Dinshaw Community Development Worker. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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At COSTI, we understand that hope means different things to different people. By filling people’s lives with hope, we’re helping build a strong and prosperous community. COSTI provides the means to a brighter future. Focusing on Empowerment: Lessons Learned from Working With Abused Women from Ethnocultural Communities Farishta Murzban Dinshaw Community Development Worker
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Page 1: Focusing on Empowerment:

At COSTI, we understand that hope means different things to different people. By filling people’s lives with hope, we’re helping build a strong and prosperous community. COSTI provides the means to a brighter future.

Focusing on Empowerment:

Lessons Learned from Working With Abused Women from

Ethnocultural Communities

Farishta Murzban DinshawCommunity Development Worker

Page 2: Focusing on Empowerment:

COSTI Immigrant Services

COSTI Immigrant Services is a community-based multicultural agency providing employment, educational, settlement and social services to all immigrant communities, new Canadians and individuals in need of assistance.

Page 3: Focusing on Empowerment:

COSTI ServicesThis presentation is informed by the work done through COSTI’s Family and Mental Health Services:

• ongoing information and education to ethnocultural communities on woman, child and elder abuse prevention

• culturally appropriate crisis counselling and support groups for women of Italian heritage

• treatment group for Spanish-speaking women who have experienced trauma

Page 4: Focusing on Empowerment:

Importance of Defining ViolenceCultural context of violence

• “Husband’s right” part of patriarchy• Parenting style – “spare the rod and spoil

the child”• Women’s role as maintainers of family

honour

Controlling behaviours often not seen as violence, but as “protective” behavior

Page 5: Focusing on Empowerment:

Importance of Defining Violence Continued

Violent behaviour vs. abusive behaviour• Violence often seen as physically harmful or

intimidating behaviour; other forms not recognized

• Labeling forced sex within an intimate relationship as abuse important

• Recognizing controlling behaviour as abuse

Page 6: Focusing on Empowerment:

Additional dilemmas in defining violence

• Intent – is it abuse if the partner means to “protect honour of the family”?

• Frequency – is it abuse if the partner resorts to aggression when he “loses control” because he is drunk?

• Injury – is looking through partner’s personal belongings without permission abuse?

• Perspective – is it abuse if the earning partner makes financial decisions for the dependant partner?

Page 7: Focusing on Empowerment:

Vulnerable Women•First generation immigrants

• Sponsored family members• Family members of principal applicants• Economic immigrants

•Second generation women of colour•Refugee women•Live-in Caregivers•Undocumented women•Trafficked women

Page 8: Focusing on Empowerment:

What makes them vulnerable?• Dependence on their spouse for status in

Canada • Financial dependency• Isolation • Absence of family support• Unfamiliarity with the Canadian system• Misconception that they will have to pay for

services

Page 9: Focusing on Empowerment:

What makes them vulnerable?• Lack of language skills, absence of professional

interpretation and translation facilities • May experience abuse for the first time• General mistrust of authority based on

experiences in their country of origin

Poverty, disability, sexual orientation may be additional barriers.

Page 10: Focusing on Empowerment:

Service ContinuumPr

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isis

Pre

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Cris

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Post

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uppo

rt

Page 11: Focusing on Empowerment:

Pre-Crisis Awareness and Prevention

Outreach

Empowerment

Page 12: Focusing on Empowerment:

Empowerment: Self-worthInsidious social messages deplete women’s self-worth

Policy implications:Programs and campaigns that:

• encourage positive body image

• illustrate healthy relationships

• provide opportunities to build support networks

• provide education so women can be financially self-sufficient

Page 13: Focusing on Empowerment:

Empowerment: Awareness

Many immigrant women are unfamiliar with their legal and constitutional rights in Canada

Policy Implications:Practical rights-based awareness campaigns supported by corresponding services, adequate budgets and skilled ethno-linguistic service providers

Page 14: Focusing on Empowerment:

Empowerment: AccessImmigrant women have limited access to information, services and opportunities

Policy implications:• An analysis of systemic barriers• A concentrated outreach effort to reach women

who do not come to agencies• Recognition that provision of transit costs & child

care are significant to women accessing services

Page 15: Focusing on Empowerment:

Empowerment: EngagementImmigrant women face barriers in participating to shape laws and policies, programs and services

Policy Implications:• Opportunities for volunteering in decision making

roles (school committees, boards)• Education about how the government works; voting• Education on voicing opinions (writing to MPs,

petitions, surveys)

Page 16: Focusing on Empowerment:

Contact InformationFarishta Dinshaw

Community Development [email protected]

COSTI Immigrant Services1700 Wilson Avenue, Suite 105, PO Box 90

Toronto, ON M3L 1B2Tel: 416-244-7714, Ext. 272


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