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HPC Onestop Shop
04 Jul, 2019
Guidelines on responsible representation and reporting of violence against women and violence against children
15 Oct, 2021
These guidelines promote responsible and effective representation and reporting of violence against women and violence against children for public advocacy purposes, such as media coverage and awareness raising campaigns. While the causes, risk factors, prevalence, patterns and consequences of violence against women and violence against children may differ, many of the considerations for ethically, safely and effectively communicating these issues are crosscutting. These guidelines are intended for media practitioners, United Nations country offices and other development and civil society organisations communicating about violence against women and violence against children.
Directives GBV pour les Journalistes Traduit.par Oswald_REGA_WCAR
18 Nov, 2021
Reporting, Journalists, media, communications, interviews, GBV, VGB,
Gender Sensitive Reporting_COVID-19
18 Nov, 2021
Reporting, media, communications, interview, journalists, sensitive, Gender, GBV, Covid-19
Guidelines for Media Reporting on GBV
18 Nov, 2021
Guidelines, Media, Reporting, Communications, Interviews, GBV, survivors, journalists
Briefing- Child Protection Area of Responsibility GBV Training
18 Nov, 2021
Child, children and adolescents, Trainings, Toolkits, Coordination,
Virtual High-Level Dialogue: Accelerating Progress and Accountability for Ending GBV in East and Southern Africa
Gender-Based Violence and Infectious Disease in Humanitarian Settings: Lessons Learned from Ebola, Zika, and COVID-19 to Inform Syndemic Policy Making
22 Nov, 2021
The impacts of infectious disease outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics are not gender neutral. Instead, infectious diseases and gender-based violence (GBV) mutually reinforce each other. Women and girls in humanitarian settings are disproportionately impacted as crises exacerbate gender inequality, violence, and community transmission. A syndemic model of infectious disease and GBV draws attention to their critical linkage, enabling more effective approaches to address both infectious disease transmission and GBV prevalence.