Brittany Higgins, Christine Holgate, that awful desk thing at parliament. It is easy think it is all bad news and nothing is changing. But these Australians show there is hope, writes Blair Williams, from Australian National University in this article republished from The Conversation.
It feels like every day brings more harrowing claims of harassment, bullying and abuse of women in our community.
In the space of just two months, we have seen Brittany Higgins’ claims she was raped at parliament, historical rape allegations against Christian Porter (which he denies), staffers performing sex acts on the desks of female MPs, MP Andrew Laming’s harassment of women and Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s “bullying” of Australia Post CEO Christine Holgate.
Last week, senior Indigenous academics authored an open letter, decrying the lack of public concern and national planning about the violence against First Nations women. Indigenous people are 32 times more likely to be hospitalised for family violence than a non-Indigenous adult.
And as Australia marks 30 years since the royal commission into Aboriginal deaths in custody, the massive over-representation of Indigenous women in the prison population remains a “national shame”.
There is hope
Many women are understandably feeling traumatised, triggered, overwhelmed and exhausted. And it would be easy to think it is all bad news and nothing is changing.
* Brittany Higgins
— Louise Milligan (@Milliganreports) April 14, 2021
* Kate
* Defence chief warns women re alcohol & being attractive.
* Laming upskirts
* Empathy training
* Fin Review on Sam Maiden
* Christine Holgate
* Navy Twerkers
* Newspaper 1985-style phwoars
What a time to be alive, a woman, in Australia.
But there is hope. As a result of what’s emerged, we’ve seen an outpouring of rage from people around Australia who are fed up with the way we treat women and victim-survivors. As an organiser of the recent March 4 Justice rally in Canberra, I saw firsthand the collective anger and frustration directed at federal parliament and wider society and the thirst for change.
I’m also taking heart from the many Australians — some household names, some less well-known — who are fighting for change and making a difference to gender equality. Here are just nine.
1. Grace Tame
Tame is the 2021 Australian of the Year for her advocacy for survivors of sexual assault. She is a prime example of how one person can make concrete change.
As a teenager, Tame was groomed and sexually abused by her school teacher. But despite his conviction and jailing, she was unable to publicly share her story because of Tasmania’s sexual assault victim gag laws. https://www.youtube.com/embed/LJmwOTfjn9U?wmode=transparent&start=0
Almost a decade later, her experience was a catalyst for the creation of the #LetHerSpeak campaign , which reformed these laws.
Tame is now redefining what it means to be a survivor of abuse. Her focus is on empowering survivors and using education as the primary method of prevention. As she says,
Change is happening and it’s happening right now.
2. Brittany Higgins
Higgins can arguably be credited as prompting Australia’s second #MeToo wave.
A former Liberal staffer, Higgins came forward in February with allegations she was raped in parliament house by a male colleague. In part, she was inspired by Tame’s call to arms a month earlier.
Higgins’ claims have rocked Australian politics, sparking a fresh focus into its toxic culture. In the weeks since, more allegations of sexism and assault in politics have emerged, with an independent inquiry into parliament house culture now underway.
But Higgins has also ignited the anger of many around Australia, resulting in nationwide protests against sexism and gendered violence. In her speech at the March 4 Justice rally in Canberra, she said,
I came forward with my story to hopefully protect other women.
3. Latoya Aroha Rule
Aroha Rule, a Wiradjuri and Māori Takatāpui person, is an activist and writer.
After their brother Wayne Fella Morrison died in custody, Aroha Rule created the #JusticeforFella campaign and helped organise nationwide protests calling for justice for the hundreds of Aboriginal people who have died in custody.
Around the recent March 4 Justice rallies, Aroha Rule played a pivotal role, drawing attention to the experiences of First Nations women.
Imagine if white women surrounded Parliament House to call for justice for dead black women.
— Latoya Aroha Rule (@latoya_aroha) March 10, 2021
As they wrote in The Guardian:
Women’s liberation marches have been growing since the 1960s in Australia, just as the incarceration rates and deaths of Aboriginal women in custody have steadily increased.
They also point out the complexity of experiences and perspectives when it comes to equality, race, gender and sexuality.
Taking a minute to reiterate that voices of queer & gender diverse ppl in the abolitionist movement, especially queer ppl who’ve lived experience of being in custody, & queer ppl campaigning against the killing of their family members in custody, really fucking matter!
— Latoya Aroha Rule (@latoya_aroha) March 20, 2021
4. Stella Donnelly
Donnelly is a singer-songwriter who writes music that critiques rape culture, the patriarchy and Australian politics.
Her first song, Boys Will Be Boys, was written about a friend’s sexual assault and released in 2017 during the “first wave” of the #MeToo movement in Australia. It was quickly adopted as an anthem by victim-survivors.
Why was she all alone
Wearing her shirt that low
They said, ‘boys will be boys’
Deaf to the word no
Through a “reel-‘em-in, knock-’em-out” comedic style of lyrics and indie-pop tunes, Donnelly sparks awareness of issues like sexism and sexual assault for a wide audience.
5. Amy McQuire
McQuire, a Darumbal and South Sea Islander woman from Rockhampton, is a journalist, writer and PhD candidate, researching media representations of violence against Aboriginal women.
She is one of a number of younger Indigenous voices who are helping to put First Nations women at the centre of conversations about violence against women and equality.
McQuire has written extensively on Aboriginal deaths in custody and the erasure of Aboriginal women from the mainstream feminist movement and discussions about domestic violence.
If you think Aboriginal women have been silent, it’s only because you haven’t heard us, our voices now hoarse after decades of screaming into the abyss of Australia’s apathy.
She also writes about the racism inherent in violence against Indigenous women.
In Australia, violence was not just used as a tool of patriarchy – it was and is used as a tool of colonialism.
When we talk about eliminating violence against Aboriginal women, we aren’t just talking about individual acts, or solely interpersonal violence. Sexual violence was and is used as a strategy to mark our bodies as acceptable for violation, not just by individuals, but by the forces of the state.
6. Saxon Mullins
In a 2018 Four Corners episode, Mullins told the story of her 2013 sexual assault and the widely publicised trials and appeals that followed.
This generated debate about sexual consent laws and how they differ around the country. The NSW Law Reform Commission then reviewed the section of the Crimes Act that deals with sexual assault and consent (the final report was a disappointment to those wanting comprehensive reforms).
Mullins recently founded the Rape and Sexual Assault Research and Advocacy Centre. It aims to prevent sexual violence through reforming consent laws and raising public understanding of consent, healthy relationships and sex education.
As she recently told the ABC’s 7.30,
I have moved into an advocacy position […] this feels like my resolution. This feels like me being able to finish this story how I think it should be finished with real change.
7. Yasmin Poole
Poole is a speaker, writer and youth advocate who champions the inclusion of young women, particularly women of colour, in political conversations.
In 2019, she was listed in both the 40 Under 40 Most Influential Asian Australians and the Australian Financial Review’s 100 Women of Influence. She was also named The Martin Luther King Jr Center’s 2021 Youth Influencer of the Year.
After the March 4 Justice, Poole criticised Morrison’s comments about the rally — he said protesters in other countries are often “met with bullets” — and the inadequate handling of Higgins’ allegations by the government.
I’m not thankful for not being shot. I’m furious. I am angry that any young woman that desires or aspires to go into politics now will have to think twice.
Poole clearly demonstrates that young women need not wait to speak up about political issues and create societal change. They aren’t simply “future leaders” but, like Poole, are already leading the way.
8. Nicole Lee
Lee is a family violence and disability activist. As a woman with disability and a survivor of family violence, Lee fights for the rights of survivors who are often excluded from this conversation altogether.
“If we’ve got 50 per cent of men to women, and if they’re all white, straight, able, and neurotypical, and cisgendered, then that’s still not equality.” Nicole Lee says she feels left out of the conversation about gender equality because it excludes real diversity #TheDrum pic.twitter.com/GMmNFZurGS
— ABC The Drum (@ABCthedrum) May 15, 2019
As a member of Victoria’s Victims Survivors Advisory Council, Lee has helped shaped the state’s response to family violence.
We can’t get away from the fact that women with disabilities are vulnerable. Society is slowly changing, but as much as people hate hearing it women are already on the back foot and then you add a disability […] we’re so much further behind.
9. Caitlin Figueiredo
Figueiredo is an Anglo-Indian woman, internationally recognised activist and social entrepreneur.
She is the founder and CEO of Jasiri Australia, a youth-led movement that encourages girls to be leaders in their communities, and fights for the increased representation of women in politics through leading the Girls Takeover Parliament program.
As Figueiredo said in 2017,
I want to accelerate change.
Blair Williams, Research Fellow, Global Institute for Women’s Leadership (GIWL), Australian National University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.