PROGRAMMES
PROGRAMMES
PRIMARY PREVENTION PROGRAMMES FOR TAUIWI AND BICULTURAL COMMUNITIES
“The Tauiwi Prevention Project” has a database of primary prevention programmes based on responses to our stocktake survey, published in Preventing Sexual Violence: A Stocktake of Tauiwi & Bicultural Primary Prevention Activities 2013. The following programmes are available to prevent sexual violence around the country.
SHAKTI LEGAL ADVOCACY & FAMILY SOCIAL SERVICES INC.
- www.shakti.org.nz
- Ph: 09 2620487
- Email: youth@shakti.org.nz
- Understanding Cultural Difference & Human Rights – Whangarei and Auckland
NATIONAL COLLECTIVE OF RAPE CRISIS AND RELATED GROUPS AOTEAROA
- www.rapecrisisnz.org.nz
- Ph: 03 474 1592
- Email: rcaotearoa@gmail.com
- Sexual Abuse Violence Education (SAVE) – delivered around the country
KIA HAUMARU – PERSONAL SAFETY EDUCATION
- www.kiahaumaru.nz
- Ph: 04 213 9710
- Email: admin@kiahaumaru.nz
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kiahaumaru
- Girls’ Self Defence Project & Women’s Self Defence – available nationally
FAMILY AND COMMUNITY SERVICES
- www.areyouok.org.nz
- Ph: 04 9163452
- Email: Sheryl.Hann005@msd.govt.nz
- It’s not OK – national and local community projects
RAINBOW YOUTH
- www.rainbowyouth.org.nz
- Ph: 09 376 4155
- Email: info@rainbowyouth.org.nz
- You, Me, Us – Auckland
RAPE PREVENTION EDUCATION, WHAKATU MAURI
- www.rpe.co.nz
- Phone: 09 360 4001
- Email: info@rapecrisis.org.nz
- All programmes available in Auckland
- BodySafe
- Sex n Respect
- Alternative Education Sex n Respect Parties
CAPS HAURAKI INC
- www.capshauraki.co.nz
- Ph: 07 868 8644
- Email: reception@capshauraki.co.nz
- Right2BSafe – Hauraki Thames
NEW ZEALAND POLICE
- www.police.govt.nz
- Ph: 04 472 3000
- Email: Tusha.Penny@police.govt.nz
- Keeping Ourselves Safe – available nationally
AUCKLAND SEXUAL ABUSE HELP FOUNDATION
- www.helpauckland.org.nz
- Ph: 09 623 1700
- Email: info@helpauckland.org.nz
- We Can Keep Safe – Auckland
EMPOWERMENT TRUST
- www.empowermenttrust.nz
- Ph: 0800 543 769
- Email: safeNZ@empowermenttrust.nz
- All programmes available nationally
- Fullpower Healthy Relationships programme and resources
- Healthy Relationships
- Kidpower for Educators of Young Children
FAMILY PLANNING
- www.familyplanning.org.nz
- Ph: 04 384 4349
- Email: national@familyplanning.org.nz
- It’s about Mana – available nationally
- Feeling Special Feeling Safe – Manawatu
RAPE CRISIS DUNEDIN
- www.rapecrisisdunedin.org.nz
- Ph: 03 474 1592
- Email: rcrisis@xtra.co.nz
- Both programmes available in Milton, Cromwell, Balclutha, Dunedin
- Sexual Abuse and Violence Education (SAVE)
- Expect Respect
TE PUNA ORANGA
- Ph: 03 381 8472
- Email: te-punaoranga@xtra.co.nz
- He Korero Pounamu – available in Te Wai Pounamu/South Island
SUPPORT OF SEXUALLY ABUSED (SOS) KAIPARA
- Ph: 09 439 6070
- Email: sos@maxnet.co.nz
- All programmes available in the Kaipara District – Northland
- Dealing with Disclosures
- Sexual Abuse and Violence Education (SAVE)
- What is Sexual Abuse?
- Safety Skills
- Sexual Harassment
SEXUAL ABUSE PREVENTION NETWORK
- www.wellingtonrapecrisis.org.nz/prevention
- Ph: 04 801 8975
- Email: coordinator@sexualabuseprevention.org.nz
- Sex & Ethics – Wellington
WAIRARAPA RAPE & SEXUAL ABUSE COLLECTIVE INC
- Ph: 06 370 8446
- Email: rape.crisis@xtra.co.nz
- Sexual Abuse Violence Education (SAVE) – Wairarapa
ABUSE & RAPE CRISIS SUPPORT (ARCS) MANAWATU
- www.arcsmanawatu.org.nz
- Ph: 06 356 5868
- Email: admin@arcsmanawatu.org.nz
- Both programmes available in Palmerston North, Marton, Fielding, Pahiatua, Levin
- Respect Sexual Abuse Prevention Program
- Rugby World Cup Local Visual Media Campaign
MORE DEFINITIONS:
WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION DEFINITION
The Tauiwi Prevention Project uses World Health Organisation definitions of primary, secondary and tertiary prevention. Primary prevention activities are population based approaches which take place in a range of social settings excluding the justice sector and aim to stop sexual violence before it occurs. This is the focus of the Tauiwi Prevention Project. Secondary and tertiary prevention approaches take place after sexual violence, and may also include criminal justice sector responses. You can access secondary and tertiary prevention through our Get Help pages.
In practice, there is not always a clear distinction between activities at the three levels. There are likely to be survivors of sexual violence in any population group, so even primary prevention activities require skill and knowledge in dealing with the impacts of sexual violence.
Primary prevention aims to create an environment which increases the protective factors which foster equitable, loving, respectful relationships and change social norms that contribute to violence-supportive attitudes and behaviours. Interventions are either universal or selective/targeted.
Universal interventions are aimed at the whole population, or groups within it, without regard to individual risk of violence perpetration or victimisation. A population sub-group might include everyone of a particular gender, or in a particular neighbourhood, school district, work place, age range, ethnic group. Examples include social norms campaigns which mobilise communities such as Right2BSafe; programmes with children and parents which teach body autonomy and touching rules such as We Can Keep Safe; and schools-based programmes which teach skills in negotiating consent such as SAVE. Influencing institutional practice is another example of universal intervention eg creating sexual harassment response policies in the workplace.
Selective or targeted interventions focus on sub-groups at heightened risk of becoming perpetrators, victims or bystanders of sexual violence in the future. Examples of selective strategies include interventions with hospitality staff to teach skills in intervening to reduce alcohol facilitated sexual violence and sexual violence prevention programmes with people with learning disabilities.
Secondary prevention focuses on immediate responses to sexual violence, often in a crisis situation. For victims, secondary prevention aims to minimise the short-term harms of violence, as well as the risk of revictimisation. Activities include, for example, specialist sexual violence services 24 hour crisis-lines and emergency services or treatment for sexually transmitted diseases following a rape. For perpetrators, secondary prevention can include interventions aimed at preventing escalation such as early intervention responses to children and young people with harmful sexual behaviour. Secondary prevention can also include activities such dealing with disclosures training for professionals in a variety of settings.
Tertiary prevention focuses on long-term responses after sexual violence, such as attempts to lessen trauma or reduce the long-term impacts associated with sexual violence and rehabilitation and reintegration of perpetrators. Examples include culturally safe, age-appropriate counselling services and support groups for survivors; sex offender treatment and monitoring; and effective criminal justice sector responses.