Development action with informed and engaged societies
After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future.
 
Co-founder Victoria Martin is pleased to see this work continue under Wits' leadership. Victoria knows that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction.
 
We honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades. Meanwhile, La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA) continues independently at cila.comminitcila.com and is linked with The CI Global site.
Time to read
1 minute
Read so far

Generating Knowledge and Evidence on the Prevention of Violence against Women: An Introductory Guide for African Women's Organisations

0 comments
Image
SummaryText

"African feminist knowledge-creation situates its work within the complexity and diversity of African contexts and is committed to intersectionality and the transformation of injustices in all African-based people's lives."

Feminist organisations across Africa play a critical role in building strategies to prevent violence against women (VAW). Finding effective ways to strengthen the capacity to understand, use, and generate knowledge and evidence is crucial to guiding VAW prevention activists' efforts. According to the African Women's Development Fund (AWDF), consensus on this evidence supports the creation of programmes that facilitate sustainable shifts in behaviour, power relations, and gender norms. To support this process, AWDF created a guide to share practical steps related to the production, ethics, and dissemination of VAW prevention knowledge and evidence.

Specifically, the guide:

  • Describes key terminology, methods, tools, and approaches for evidence generation and knowledge production in the field of VAW prevention;
  • Broadens the conceptualisation (beyond an earlier guide, at Related Summaries below, produced with Raising Voices in 2019) to encourage more African feminist knowledge and evidence production and sharing in VAW prevention; and
  • Provides steps and strategies that activists, feminists, and African women's organisations can integrate into their efforts to advance knowledge and evidence-based VAW prevention.

As noted here: "Most critical to feminist knowledge and evidence generation is sharing with women and communities involved in the process of its creation. It recognises women as experts and co-producers of VAW knowledge rather than merely as individuals from whom data is extracted....Women's rights organisations and activists can produce and circulate VAW prevention knowledge and evidence directly in community events to launch and discuss findings, produce information sheets, hold radio talk shows, and produce visual formats like short films or comics for audiences that may find these more accessible."

According to AWDF, this guide serves to honour the multitude of types of knowledge that African women continue to create, the process of creating and producing them, and those who make them. It hopes to ensure the continued building of interventions that are well informed, confident, and in solidarity with one another, despite activists' different contexts on the continent and beyond.

Publication Date
Number of Pages

24

Source

AWDF website, May 24 2022.