As the Mass Casualty Commission proceedings wound down this month, Be the Peace Institute’s Executive Director, Sue Bookchin found herself reflecting on healing - our collective trauma, our distrust in the in the forces we thought we could rely on to protect us.
Sue Bookchin for Be the Peace: Missed opportunity to help shift narrative on gender-based violence
The Mass Casualty Commission has hosted multiple panels and roundtables on the connections between GBV, misogyny and mass shootings, but who is listening? Our ED, Sue Bookchin who has been steadfast in her participation throughout the MCC calls for more attention by media, legal professionals and the public to the depth of local expertise available during the inquiry on these critical connections and needed reforms.
NANCY ROSS: Tackling the roots of gender-based violence
We need to rethink the way we are responding to gender-based violence. Be the Peace Institute’s Board Chair and faculty at Dalhousie School of Social Work, Dr. Nancy Ross, shares promising practices for healing and prevention for all of those affected by violence: victims, perpetrators, children and communities.
Stacey Godsoe for Be the Peace: Mass Violence and GBV Linked
Stacey Godsoe, Project & Resource Coordinator at Be the Peace Institute, shared some clear and recurring patterns across the research on the connections between mass shootings and gender based violence. If we do not make these connections we fail to understand the root of the problem and cannot prevent future atrocities.
Culturally Responsive Care Project featured in Dal News
This community-led project is aimed at improving culturally responsive health and social services through research on issues related to COVID-19 and focused on the disease’s impact on access to services for African Nova Scotians who faced gender-based violence.
Partners include the Association of Black Social Workers, Be the Peace Institute, and Leave Out Violence, who conducted a series of “kitchen table discussions” with people from the African Nova Scotian community. They discovered that people were encountering racism and inequalities that negatively affected their access to care and service. While the research indicates that this issue didn’t start with COVID and will unfortunately not end with it, the pandemic has brought systemic inequities in our systems to light so we can better address them.
SUE BOOKCHIN & EMMA HALPERN: Resist urge to pin some blame on mass shooter's abused partner
Our very own Sue Bookchin (in collaboration with Emma Halpern of the Elizabeth Fry Society) wrote this plea for a more compassionate and trauma informed consideration of the role that domestic violence played in Lisa Banfield's life and decision making during the days surrounding the mass shooting in Portapique, NS on April 18 & 19, 2020. While we need to shine a light on all that unfolded during the events in Portapique, critical context is needed including the role that IPV played in order to formulate recommendations that might prevent mass killings in the future.
Renzetti: A need to focus on ending violence as we do the pandemic
Renzetti speaks to this innate desire to look away from the root causes of gendered violence and how that is in fact killing women. While we mourn and reflect on the terrible and targeted massacre in Montréal 31 years ago, the sun is barely setting on the April mass murders in Portapique, N.S. that began with an act of domestic violence, carried out by a man who had committed previous acts of domestic violence, reportedly ignored by police.
We know there are direct links between misogyny and mass shootings. However, there is a way to prevent future such atrocities as Renzetti explains, if we resolve to tackle GBV as we have COVID in this country.
Domestic Violence Beyond the Pandemic
Some thoughtful analysis of the impact of the pandemic on domestic violence rates in NS from Transition House Association of Nova Scotia.
CBC: The hidden horror of police domestic violence in Nova Scotia
"In general, women are afraid of not being believed and not having their cases taken seriously and that's taken to a whole other level when the abuser is part of the system a victim is supposed to be reporting to," said Geiger-Bardswich.
Research done in the United States suggests that officers are actually more likely to abuse their domestic partners than the general public, said Nicholas Bala, a professor of family law at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont. He said there hasn't been enough research done in Canada to determine if that's the case here.
EDITORIAL: Dark times on homefront due to domestic violence upsurge
“If you add something as extraordinary as a global pandemic and then have the kind of economic insecurities that happen — another huge factor around amplifying domestic violence — it’s a perfect storm of being trapped with the abuser, not being able to use the normal mechanisms that women do to keep themselves and their children safe, economic insecurity and certainly the fact that the abuser is there 24/7,” Jenny Wright, a member of the expert advisory committee with the Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability, said in April.
Toxic Masculinity is a Myth, but Insecure Men Lash Out at Women
We Need to Learn from the Men Who Rape
From Cop to Survivor
Cary Ryan is a survivor of domestic abuse and a former cop who says she was harassed in the workplace because of her mental illness. Now, she studies how cops respond to domestic violence.
Male Violence: "A pandemic in its own right"
Addressing domestic violence also means addressing male violence and male entitlement - at the root of inequality and so many incidents of societal violence, including mass shootings.