Contacts

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Tag: focus group

watc-may-
Initiatives

June 2024 Focus Groups are Open!

Want to get more involved with WomenatthecentrE? We’re currently running a handful of focus groups for different initiatives, topics, and demographics!
Rooting Resilience
This focus group is to explore your experiences with peer support.
Open to GBV survivors living with a disability.
Interested? Email Mandira Arnab Aich, the Program Manager.
The Amourgynoir Code
This focus group is a series of interviews to learn about your unique nuanced experiences as a Black woman, girl, gender-diverse and/or trans person.
Open to BWGGDT survivors.
Interested? Email Tarah Paul, the Program Manager.
Resilience 360
This focus group is to understand ways to support survivors of human trafficking.
Open to friends and family of human trafficking survivors.
Interested? Email Mandira Arnab Aich, the Program Manager.
News

WomenatthecentrE of Child Welfare

The Ontario Association of Children’s Aid Societies (OACAS) is developing a Practice Guide, Policies and procedures and trainingย material on how to ‘do things differently’ through understanding the connection between woman abuse and child protection. These will shape not only the way they deliver services, or the way their training is developed and delivered, but will influence the general attitudes of the staff working within Child Welfare, from management to the front-line workers.

On December 21st, WomenatthecentrE facilitated a focus group, bringing together women survivors from all over the province to help the OACAS get a better understanding of the complexities faced by women as they try to protect themselves and their children.

It was a great opportunity for us to raise the critical issues that they needed to know in order to make Child Welfare agencies more understanding and responsive to the real issues affecting us and our children, as we move our lives forward, free from violence.

They are moving forward with an awareness of the fact that they have three issues to address:

  1. how to protect at-risk children on the one hand, while
  2. working with the mothers & safety planning for women who are experiencing (have experienced) violence, and at the same time
  3. engaging abusive male partners and holding them accountable.

Thank you to all the amazing women who came forward and shared.

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