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    HomeNewsPrevention of Sexual Violence Programme (PSVP)

    Prevention of Sexual Violence Programme (PSVP)

    Through the PSVP’s monitoring and learning tools, the ICRC works to closely track and measure the:

    1. Change of calculations: The way that actors of influence – including community leaders and members – make decisions regarding sexual violence and what could cause them to change their actions
    2. Intent: The extent to which these actors are willing to make a commitment to implementing these changes in their behaviour
    3. Action: How they will promote concrete actions that lead to IHL-compliant behaviour that reduces human suffering in war (e.g., the prevention of sexual violence)

    How can we measure what hasn’t happened?

    Initial findings from the first few years of the PSVP’s implementation confirm it is indeed possible to improve and measure short and mid-term prevention outcomes. Through the PSVP, the ICRC has strengthened its methodology and its ability to improve and measure the impact of its frontline prevention efforts. That led to a positive behavioural change in shifting the blame to perpetrators instead of victims, and a notable reduction in misconceptions and about sexual violence. Evidence has also underscored what types of ‘messengers’ and ‘methods’ are most effective in shifting group norms and behaviours around the prevention of sexual violence.

    Weapon bearers: The role of commanders and instructors

    During the first two years of the PSVP’s implementation, a new frontline training package, Be Prepared, was piloted by several ICRC delegations through formal training sessions and/or

    their ongoing protection dialogue and awareness-raising reaching more than 2,600 members of state and non-state armed groups. Preliminary data from these engagements confirm weapon bearers perceive the ICRC to be a credible source of information on the prevention of sexual violence which has left to an increase in their interest in preventing sexual violence (20% increase) and knowledge of how to reinforce this prohibition (51% increase).

    However, evidence also shows that successful prevention of sexual violence is highly contingent upon commanders’ commitments to reinforce key messages on the topic before and after ICRC trainings as well as willingness to integrate the prohibition on sexual violence in their rules, regulations, and procedures. This is complicated by a training and trust gap whereby less than 15% of all military instructors who have engaged with the PSVP feel equipped to train their troops on the topic and less than 68% of the rank and file believe their commanders would stop sexual violence if it were happening. 

    Communities: Outreach to promote help-seeking behaviours

    Communities are deeply impacted by sexual violence during armed conflict but – with the right support – can also be an integral part of the solution. In 2024 alone, the ICRC and its RC/RC Movement partners have trained more than 633 community influencers who have conducted thousands of outreach sessions on stigma reduction reaching more than 150,000 community members – including local authorities, religious leaders, teachers, youth, and service providers – across multiple countries.

    Through its engagement with communities affected by sexual violence, the ICRC has learned the messenger matters; even the most powerful survivor-led messages will not resonate unless they are adapted to the realities of each target audience (e.g., elders vs. youth, men vs. women, etc.) and delivered by community members who are credible ‘messengers’ in the eyes of their peers. Notably, more than half of all ICRC-trained community influencers are women while more than one-third are adolescents and youth between the ages of 14 and 30.

    Data shows the ICRC’s contextually adapted community outreach activities have significantly contributed to positive behavioural change for better stigma reduction. Overall, community participants have:

    • Committed to support victims/survivors in 98% of the sessions
    • Committed to reject perpetrators of sexual violence in 96% of the sessions

    Perhaps most importantly, community outreach has a tangible impact on help seeking behaviour by increasing awareness about services and reducing barriers to access like stigma. In locations where the ICRC and its RC/RC Movement partners are implementing community outreach, victims/survivors are 4.5 times more likely to seek help

    We acknowledge Source link for the information.

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