: Awareness campaigns must be sustained over time, requiring ongoing effort and commitment to create lasting change. This can involve building coalitions, engaging in policy advocacy, and providing ongoing support services to survivors.
: Consent is not a one-time event; survivors should be able to withdraw their story or change details at any point in the campaign.
How do you know if a survivor-led campaign actually works? Vanity metrics (views, shares) are cheap. True impact is measured in behavioral change.
Awareness campaigns play a crucial role in amplifying survivor voices and promoting social change. These campaigns aim to educate the public about critical issues, challenge societal norms, and advocate for policy reforms. Effective awareness campaigns often feature survivor stories, using personal narratives to illustrate the human impact of a particular issue.
: Stories should always be shared on the survivor's own terms. This includes the right to choose their own identification (e.g., "victim" vs. "survivor"), set boundaries on what is shared, and maintain the right to withdraw consent. Avoiding Re-traumatization
: Awareness campaigns must be sustained over time, requiring ongoing effort and commitment to create lasting change. This can involve building coalitions, engaging in policy advocacy, and providing ongoing support services to survivors.
: Consent is not a one-time event; survivors should be able to withdraw their story or change details at any point in the campaign.
How do you know if a survivor-led campaign actually works? Vanity metrics (views, shares) are cheap. True impact is measured in behavioral change.
Awareness campaigns play a crucial role in amplifying survivor voices and promoting social change. These campaigns aim to educate the public about critical issues, challenge societal norms, and advocate for policy reforms. Effective awareness campaigns often feature survivor stories, using personal narratives to illustrate the human impact of a particular issue.
: Stories should always be shared on the survivor's own terms. This includes the right to choose their own identification (e.g., "victim" vs. "survivor"), set boundaries on what is shared, and maintain the right to withdraw consent. Avoiding Re-traumatization