Jennifer McCleary-Sills

Report: Opening the Pathways to Help for Survivors of Violence

New ICRW report provides recommendations for improving services to women in Tanzania after they experience violence
Tue, 03/19/2013

A new report by ICRW identifies gaps in services to Tanzanian women who experience violence and provides recommendations for improving the national response to gender-based violence.

Tanzanian women who experience violence face an array of barriers when they seek help, and as a result, few women solicit or receive appropriate support, according to a new International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) report.

The report, “Help-Seeking Pathways and Barriers for Survivors of Gender-based Violence in Tanzania,” is based on a qualitative study in the Dar es Salaam, Iringa and Mbeya regions of the country. Researchers aimed to document community perceptions and attitudes about violence against women, identify available services for survivors as well as gaps in resources, and provide recommendations for improving existing services.

The study will inform the design of a new initiative by the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which strives to advance the availability and quality of services for survivors in Tanzania, improve the national response to violence and enhance research evidence related to gender-base violence, among other goals.

Violence against women is widespread in Tanzania, with 44 percent of women reporting in the most recent Demographic Health Survey that they’ve experienced physical or sexual violence from an intimate partner in their lifetime. Support services, meanwhile, are inadequate.

For the study, ICRW partnered with a team from the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Dar es Salaam to conduct interviews with service providers, male and female community members and others. Jennifer McCleary-Sills, a social and behavioral scientist, and Sophie Namy, a gender and development specialist, led the research for ICRW.

Based on the interviews, researchers found that many types of gender-based violence – such as forced sex or physical violence in a relationship – were perceived as socially acceptable. In terms of physical abuse, many women said that they came to expect and even accept such violence because that is the norm in their community.

Women who experience violence seldom report it to anyone, including the police or medical personnel, the study found. If women do seek help, they often face an extremely slow, cumbersome process that neither prioritizes survivors’ needs nor responds to violence as an emergency situation. What’s more, researchers found that adequate support and justice are often blocked by a host of socio-cultural and structural barriers. For instance, many women fear being blamed for reporting a rape or are hesitant to access the justice system if her perpetrator has the means to possibly pay off police or a government official.

Gaps in services for survivors of violence were found across the various regions in the study. However, researchers discovered that obstacles for those seeking help and to access to care were particularly prevalent in rural locations and communities outside of Dar es Salaam, the capital.

The study offers a comprehensive set of recommendations to improve how the government and all sectors respond to gender-based violence in general and survivors’ needs in particular. If implemented effectively, researchers say their recommendations have the potential to further strengthen Tanzania’s efforts to prevent and eliminate violence against women.

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The War at Home: Uncharted Territory
The War at Home: Suffering in Silence

The War at Home: Uncharted Territory

Tanzanian women face a labyrinth of barriers when seeking help after experiencing violence

An ICRW researcher sets out to understand why more than half of all Tanzanian women who experience domestic violence don’t seek help. Ultimately, she discovers that women face a web of social and structural obstacles when they seek help after experiencing violence.

Jua* is a 25-year-old Tanzanian woman with a violent husband. He beats her when he’s angry. He blames her for making him angry and “forcing” him to beat her. Tragically, Jua’s situation is not uncommon. 

ICRW’s Jennifer McCleary-Sills to Speak at AIDS Conference

Mon, 07/23/2012

ICRW’s Jennifer McCleary-Sills will discuss how to address young people’s vulnerability to HIV in developing countries during the International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C.

ICRW Social and Behavioral Scientist Jennifer McCleary-Sills on July 24 will participate in a panel discussion on how to strengthen the capacity of organizations to understand and address gender issues, HIV and AIDS in their communities. 

The event is part of the International AIDS Conference this week in Washington, D.C., and will take place from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in mini room 8 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center downtown. 

McCleary-Sills will discuss approaches ICRW used to guide two Tanzanian groups on how to engage with and mobilize communities to understand and address teenage girls’ vulnerability to HIV. Her presentation will draw from ICRW’s experience designing and evaluating the pilot project, "Vitu Newala,” which took place from 2010 to 2011 in a remote Tanzanian district. The effort was funded by the Positive Action program at ViiV Healthcare, a pharmaceutical company that focuses solely on HIV. 

The following day, McCleary-Sills will participate in a discussion in the Positive Action Networking Zone of the Global Village on how to involve adolescents in HIV prevention programs, and explain why programs targeting girls must also involve boys. That event is scheduled for 11 a.m. on July 25.

Learn how you can partner with ICRW.

Commentary: Breaking the Invisible Barriers to Birth Control

Global community must tackle obstacles that prevent women from accessing contraceptives
Tue, 07/10/2012

TrustLaw Women, a Thomson Reuters Foundation service, features a commentary by ICRW's Jennifer McCleary-Sills in advance of the July 11 London Summit on Family Planning. In her piece, McCleary-Sills argues that the international community will likely fail to deliver on commitments to improve women's access to women contraceptive methods if it does not address the often invisible barriers that block their ability to get birth control.

TrustLaw Women, a Thomson Reuters Foundation service, features the commentary "Breaking the Invisible Barriers to Birth Control," by ICRW's Jennifer McCleary-Sills in advance of the July 11 London Summit on Family Planning. Spearheaded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the British government, the summit’s goals include expanding the availability of family planning services, information and supplies to enable 120 million more women in the world’s poorest countries to use contraceptives by 2020.

In anticipation of the London gathering, ICRW and several other global organizations urged Melinda Gates and British Prime Minister David Cameron to make women's human rights and autonomy central to any commitments made at the summit. Meanwhile, McCleary-Sills argues in her commentary that the international community will likely fail to deliver on commitments to improve women's access to contraceptive methods if it does not address the often invisible barriers that block their ability to get birth control. The commentary draws from findings in ICRW's latest report, "Women's Demand for Reproductive Control," which McCleary-Sills co-authored.

For the report, ICRW collaborated with a variety of organizations to identify approaches that address women's barriers to birth control. Here is a highlight of a few of these approaches:

* Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication Programs (CCP) helped develop a radio mini-series targeted to men in Uganda that aimed to spur conversation about societal norms that promote having large families and a preference for sons. In Egypt, CCP led an effort enabled families to better protect and maintain their health. This included using a multi-pronged communication strategy to inform newlyweds about family planning and other health issues. 

* The Central American Health Institute (ICAS) used a voucher program to tackle limited information and use of family planning methods among adolescents in Nicaragua.

* The Lady Health Worker program in Pakistan used a mobile outreach strategy to address barriers women faced to getting birth control, including restricted mobility and limited communication with health care providers.

Related content: ICRW Commits to Build Evidence on Women's Access to Family Planning Services

Help-Seeking Pathways and Barriers for Survivors of Gender-based Violence in Tanzania

Help-Seeking Pathways and Barriers for Survivors of Gender-based Violence in Tanzania
Results from a Study in Dar es Salaam, Mbeya, and Iringa Regions

Jennifer McCleary-Sills, Sophie Namy, Joyce Nyoni, Datius Rweyemamu, Adrophina Salvatory, Ester Steven
2013

Over the last few decades, gender-based violence has gained international recognition as a grave social and human rights concern. In Tanzania, gender-based violence is widespread; the most recent Tanzania Demographic and Health Survey found that 44% of ever-married women have experienced physical and/or sexual violence from an intimate partner in their lifetime. ICRW and the University of Dar es Salaam's Department of Sociology and Anthropology, in partnership with EngenderHealth, conducted a qualitative study in three target regions of the country: Dar es Salaam, Iringa, and Mbeya. This report documents community perceptions and attitudes about gender-based violence, identifies the range of informal and formal services currently available to survivors, highlights gaps in service provision, and provides recommendations for improving existing services. The findings are based on 104 key informant interviews conducted with a wide array of stakeholders, service providers, and duty bearers at the national, district, and ward levels, as well as participatory focus group discussions with 96 male and female community members. The research and recommendations currently are informing the overall design of a multi-sectoral intervention to scale up the response to gender-based violence in Tanzania under the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS (PEPFAR).

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We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Breaking the Invisible Barriers to Birth Control

Mon, 07/09/2012
TrustLaw Women

TrustLaw Women, a Thomson Reuters Foundation service, features a commentary by ICRW's Jennifer McCleary-Sills in advance of the July 11 London Summit on Family Planning. In her piece, McCleary-Sills argues that the international community will likely fail to deliver on commitments to improve women's access to women contraceptive methods if it does not address the often invisible barriers that block their ability to get birth control.

Women's Demand for Reproductive Control

Women's Demand for Reproductive Control
Understanding and Addressing Gender Barriers

Jennifer McCleary-Sills, Allison McGonagle, Anju Malhotra
2012

Millions of women each year experience unintended pregnancies, and millions more have unmet need for family planning. One of the persistent gaps in knowledge is the role of gender barriers that women face in defining and achieving their reproductive intentions. This paper provides a gender analysis of women’s demand for reproductive control. This analysis illuminates how the social construction of gender affects fertility preferences, unmet need, and the barriers that women face to using contraception and safe abortion. It also helps to bridge important dichotomies in the population, family planning, and reproductive health fields.

(1.38 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

Take a Tour of Vitu Newala

ViiV Healthcare Effect spotlights “Vitu Newala” project in Tanzania
Mon, 04/02/2012

ICRW and its Tanzania-based partner, Taasisi ya Maendeleo Shirikishi Arusha (TAMASHA), are profiled on the ViiV Healthcare Effect website for the project “Vitu Newala” or “Newala Youth Can.”

The International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and its Tanzania-based partner, Taasisi ya Maendeleo Shirikishi Arusha (TAMASHA), are profiled on the ViiV Healthcare Effect website for the project “Vitu Newala” or “Newala Youth Can.” The website features a “tour” of the project, which worked with communities in the remote Newala district of Tanzania to understand the needs of adolescent girls and address their vulnerabilities to HIV. The tour includes an in-depth summary of the project as well as video interviews with ICRW’s Jennifer McCleary-Sills and TAMASHA’s Richard Mabala and Annagrace Rwehumbiza.

Vitu Newala was funded by ViiV Healthcare, a pharmaceutical company that focuses solely on HIV. Through its Positive Action program, ViiV Healthcare works with communities most vulnerable to HIV disease with projects ranging from education, prevention, care and treatment.

Laying Down Arms, Picking up the Pieces

Meeting the unique needs of both women and men in post-conflict Republic of Congo

Although the conflict in the Republic of Congo officially ended almost a decade ago, the tough business of mending broken lives is still underway. As is true in many wars, women's lives were deeply affected.

Girls Take HIV Risk into Their Own Hands

ICRW project offers promising model for adolescent girl programs
Wed, 11/30/2011

A pilot program designed by ICRW in Tanzania begins to shift social norms that make adolescent girls more at risk of HIV infection and unwanted pregnancies. It offers a promising – and needed – model that can be applied in a variety of settings.

In Tanzania's remote Newala District, adolescent girls are met with unwanted sexual advances on their way to the neighbor's house, to the water well, to the store. They feel forced to give in. Sometimes, they're raped. Girls are even scared to go to school because, they say, some teachers "just want to have sex with you."

Girls Preparing

The girls of Newala are not alone in their predicament. It reflects the experience of girls in many sub-Saharan African communities, where nearly 60 percent of all people living with HIV are women, according to UNAIDS. Sexual violence – along with early marriage, sex for pay with much older men and multiple, concurrent partnerships – are everyday realities for teenage girls. It's an environment experts say is fueled by numerous factors, including poverty, a breakdown in family and harmful norms that define girls' place in society.

All of this puts 12- to 17-year-old girls in Newala at greater risk of being infected with HIV. Unfortunately, HIV programming for vulnerable children gives little attention to teenage girls, whose needs tend to be eclipsed by those of very young children who lack basic food and care. And because of this, research evidence on adolescent girls' specific vulnerabilities and how to reduce their HIV risk remains insufficient.

Experts at the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) are working to change that.

ICRW was tapped by U.K.-based ViiV Healthcare's Positive Action program to study the variety of ways in which girls are susceptible to HIV in four Newala communities, and then design a pilot project to address the most pressing risks. Working in partnership with local nongovernmental organization Taasisi ya Maendeleo Shirikishi Arusha (TAMASHA), ICRW found that long-held social norms can begin to shift when girls are encouraged to talk about their experiences and when others, including boys, reflect on their own behaviors.

Called "Vijana Tunaweza Newala" or "Vitu Newala," which means "Newala Youth Can," the project in Tanzania adds to ICRW's ongoing research about best practices to serve youth, particularly girls, and provides a model that can be applied in other settings. It also places ICRW among a small subset of organizations globally that focuses on girls – instead of institutions, such as schools – to drive community-based social change.

"Too often, programs targeting vulnerable girls are created without actually talking to the girls," said Jennifer McCleary-Sills, an ICRW social and behavioral scientist who led the project. "What makes the approach ICRW designed for Vitu Newala unique is that it didn't treat adolescent girls as passive beneficiaries of a pre-packaged HIV prevention program. Instead, it empowered girls to define their own needs, lead and interpret research on the issues that affect them and educate their peers with activities they developed."

Meet them where they are

Girl Power in TanzaniaLocated in southern Tanzania, Newala District is comprised of 28 rural, predominantly Muslim communities where families make a living farming cashews. It has one paved road. Mobile phone networks just developed more of a presence this year.

Women and girls here are expected to stay at home, and if they veer from that space, they risk harassment or sexual violence. The chances that girls will be sexually abused are so great that parents don't want to send their daughters to secondary school. Even taking part in Newala's traditional dance to mark girls' transition to womanhood has become risky. These days, young men attend. It's not uncommon for groups of them to fondle or sexually assault girls on the way home from the celebration.

"It all comes down to how gender is socially constructed – women are meant to live their lives primarily in the private, domestic sphere, whereas men control the public sphere," said Katherine Fritz, director of ICRW's global health research and programs. "When girls circulate in the public sphere, it can be seen as something that's outside of the norm and potentially provocative. If a girl is assaulted while moving around by herself, many people draw the conclusion that 'she asked for it.'"

Further fueling the situation, very few girls and boys grow up with two parents at home, in part because they have died from AIDS. When one or both parents die or separate, children often are left with grandparents or on their own. Researchers found that a number of teenage girls in Newala are heading households and providing for their siblings, a trend that has plagued girls across sub-Saharan Africa for years in countries where HIV-rates are high.

Such fractured families and the lack of adult presence in girls' lives contribute to their vulnerable state: Many are wooed by much older men who pay the girls for sex and help provide for their basic needs as well as those of their siblings. Sometimes, girls will have a series of such partners over time.

To better understand and address teenage girls' risks in Newala, ICRW designed an approach that allowed girls and the community to turn a mirror on themselves, analyze what they saw and determine the changes they wanted to make. Here's how it worked:

Risk mapGirls ages 18 to 24 were trained by TAMASHA to be youth researchers who aimed to better understand younger girls' lives in Newala. Researchers talked to 12 to 17 year olds about their aspirations and roadblocks to achieving them. They asked them to draw maps identifying spots in their communities where they felt unsafe. Girls were then encouraged to come up with ways to reduce the risks they faced.

Meanwhile, project researchers spoke with parents, community leaders and service providers in Newala to hear their perspectives. ICRW found that many adults put the onus on girls, accusing them of not making "better choices." Girls were expected to wait until they were adults – or ideally, married – to have sex. At the same time, researchers found that men and boys were not being held accountable for their actions.

Girls also told researchers they didn't feel as if anyone in the communities took responsibility for keeping them safe. Many were frustrated that they were blamed for not avoiding risks from which no one helped protect them. With that, TAMASHA asked the girls to suggest community members who should be responsible for making dangerous areas in their communities safer.

"The protective factors that used to be there in all African cultures have broken down," which is in part why men's behavior goes unchecked and girls' risks increasingly rise, said Richard Mabala, executive director of TAMASHA. "And there's nothing that has really taken its place."

"This is why we believe by young people coming together they can start creating what takes its place."

Youth lead social change

Indeed, young people were the driving force behind Vitu Newala, which essentially sought to empower youth to advocate for themselves and reduce their vulnerability to HIV. The program included activities created by adolescent girls and boys, such as dramatic plays, to learn about and discuss everything from reproductive health to goal setting. Together with adults, they figured out how to better protect the community's young people, especially girls.

Related News and Commentary

Such communal reflection by boys and girls had never happened before in Newala. For most girls, it was the first time they'd been asked their opinion or share their experiences. McCleary-Sills said this required a delicate balance – after all, men and boys perpetuate the forms of violence that increase girls' vulnerability to HIV. But she said they had to be involved if the environment for Newala's girls was to change.

"It was a matter of bringing boys and girls together on equal footing – not as good and evil, or victim and aggressor – and empowering them all to be agents of social change in their communities," McCleary-Sills said.

Anecdotal evidence from Vitu Newala shows that the pilot program made a difference in a short time: With the exception of school, girls reported that they felt safer at some of the most risky locations identified in the formative research. Communities are now supporting Vitu Newala to create youth centers and some are rewriting bylaws to limit boys' participation in girls' initiation ceremony. And young people said they now think and act differently about sex, relationships and their future.

Even if limited in reach and scope, Vitu Newala offers a promising model that can be applied to other efforts targeting vulnerable girls in sub-Saharan African communities and elsewhere.

"Although what we know so far is a small amount, it does appear to be moving social norms in the direction we want," ICRW's Fritz said. "But we need continued support to document and measure the impact at the individual and community level over a longer period of time."

Read more about ICRW's work with adolescents: Boys and Girls Becoming Equals, Changing for the Better

Gillian Gaynair is ICRW's senior writer and editor.

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