Support and further information
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland 24 Hour Domestic & Sexual Abuse Helpline
0808 802 1414 | help@dsahelpline.org | https://dsahelpline.org/
Nexus
02890326803 | info@nexusni.org | https://nexusni.org
Women’s Aid Federation NI
02890249041 | info@womenaidni.org| https://www.womensaidni.org/get-help/
Women’s Aid NI - https://www.womensaidni.org/get-help/local-groups/
Belfast Women’s Aid Webchat - https://belfastwomensaid.org.uk/launch-of-new-web-chat-service/
Rape Crisis Northern Ireland
0800 0246 991 | emailsupport@rapecrisisni.org.uk | https://rapecrisisni.org.uk
Republic of Ireland
Ireland National 24-Hour Helpline (rape, sexual assault, sexually harassment, sexual abuse)
1800 77 8888 | helpline@womensaid.ie | https://www.womensaid.ie/services/helpline.html
Women's Aid 24hr National Freephone Helpline (Domestic Abuse)
1800 341 900
Rape Crisis Counselling Service
counselling@rcc.ie
Rape Crisis Network Ireland
https://www.rcni.ie
Dublin Rape Crisis Centre Webchat
https://www.drcc.ie/services/helpline/webchat/
England
England 24 Hour Domestic Abuse Helpline
0808 2000 247 | https://www.nationaldahelpline.org.uk/
Women’s Aid Federation England
helpline@womensaid.org.uk
Find local Women’s Aid services
https://www.womensaid.org.uk/womens-aid-directory/
Find support from Refuge
https://refuge.org.uk/i-need-help-now/how-we-can-help-you/
Rape Crisis England & Wales 24 hour helpline
0808 802 9999 | https://rapecrisis.org.uk/
Rape Crisis Live Chat
https://rapecrisis.org.uk/get-help/want-to-talk/#live-chat
Wales
Wales 24 Hour Domestic Abuse Helpline
0808 80 10 800 / text 07458 143 415 | info@livefearfreehelpline.wales | https://welshwomensaid.org.uk/information-support/i-need-help/
Domestic abuse web chat
https://gov.wales/live-fear-free/contact-live-fear-free
Rape Crisis England & Wales 24 hour helpline
0808 802 9999 | https://rapecrisis.org.uk/
Rape Crisis Live Chat
https://rapecrisis.org.uk/get-help/want-to-talk/#live-chat
Scotland
Scotland 24 Hour Domestic Abuse & Forced Marriage Helpline
0800 027 1234 | helpline@sdafmh.org.uk | https://www.sdafmh.org.uk/en/
Domestic Abuse & Forced Marriage web chat
https://sdafmh-chat.devsoc.org/#/
Rape Crisis Scotland Helpline
08088 01 03 02 / text 07537 410 027 | support@rapecrisisscotland.org.uk | https://www.rapecrisisscotland.org.uk/help-helpline/
United Nations Background
Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is one of the most widespread, persistent and devastating human rights violations in our world today remains largely unreported due to the impunity, silence, stigma and shame surrounding it.
In general terms, it manifests itself in physical, sexual and psychological forms, encompassing:
- intimate partner violence (battering, psychological abuse, marital rape, femicide);
- sexual violence and harassment (rape, forced sexual acts, unwanted sexual advances, child sexual abuse, forced marriage, street harassment, stalking, cyber- harassment);
- human trafficking (slavery, sexual exploitation);
- female genital mutilation; and
- child marriage.
To further clarify, the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women issued by the UN General Assembly in 1993, defines violence against women as “any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.”
While gender-based violence can happen to anyone, anywhere, some women and girls are particularly vulnerable - for instance, young girls and older women, women who identify as lesbian, bisexual, transgender or intersex, migrants and refugees, indigenous women and ethnic minorities, or women and girls living with HIV and disabilities, and those living through humanitarian crises.
Violence against women continues to be an obstacle to achieving equality, development, peace as well as to the fulfillment of women and girls’ human rights.
Find out more about the United Nations' commitments and the campaign to eliminate violence against women and girls.
Creative activism has played an important role in the struggle against violence against women and girls. Across the literary, visual and performing arts, artists and writers have helped to break the silence and defy the shame about violence against women and girls, honour survivor strength and resistance, shape understanding of gendered violence, and provide survivors with moments of recognition of their lives and experiences. Such work has challenged cultural mythologies that on the one hand minimise the impact of violence, and on the other portray it as something impossible to recover from. Creative activism has disputed the victim-blaming/perpetrator-excusing portrayals of previous generations of (largely white, male) artists and writers.
Recently there has been a resurgence of creative activism. #MeToo inspired survivors to give creative expression to their experiences and gave fresh impetus to feminist scholarship on the role of creative representations in either perpetuating or preventing violence against women and girls. Nevertheless, the potential of the arts to create a world without violence against women and girls remains under-explored and under-recognised.
Delegates to the conference will enjoy a wide range of contributions and perspectives from creative practitioners, researchers, and activists around the world on topics such as the female body in crime fiction, survival strategies in speculative fiction, Indigenous feminist futurisms, films and TV shows created by victim-survivors, horror as a tool for meaning making, subverting colonialism, and much more. There will be opportunities for questions, discussion and networking throughout the event.