
Bakersfield Gets $5M to Prevent Domestic Violence Deaths
A survivor who lost her arm is sharing her story as Bakersfield launches a $5 million violence prevention program. The city is using data to stop domestic violence before it turns deadly.
Find uplifting stories about heroes, innovations, and solutions
7000 results for "gender violence prevention"

A survivor who lost her arm is sharing her story as Bakersfield launches a $5 million violence prevention program. The city is using data to stop domestic violence before it turns deadly.
Kenya's President William Ruto launched a new plan to end gender-based violence, calling every citizen to join the fight. From parents teaching respect at home to communities breaking harmful silences, he's making it clear that protecting lives is everyone's responsibility.

Nigeria's Oyo State Governor promises funding and political support to fight gender-based violence after meeting advocacy groups. His wife called it not just a social issue but an economic drain on communities.

CHI Health Good Samaritan is teaming up with the S.A.F.E. Center to bring free Green Dot training to Kearney, teaching community members how to prevent violence before it starts. The nationally recognized program shows everyday people how to step in and shift their community's culture toward safety.

Over 60 countries now celebrate White Ribbon Day, a movement that's flipping the script on ending violence against women by recruiting men as mentors and allies. A London photo exhibit honored 16 men nominated by women for their powerful advocacy work.
An Australian city is pioneering a bold approach to ending domestic violence before it starts. Respect Ballarat targets schools, workplaces, and sports clubs with prevention programs that experts say could become a national model.

In northern Nigeria, a new program is turning traditional family structures into a force for change by empowering grandmothers to combat gender-based violence. Research shows these family matriarchs hold more influence over household decisions than anyone else.

More than 100 religious and traditional leaders from 23 African countries are meeting in Nigeria to prevent violence against women and girls. Their influence is creating lasting change where laws alone haven't worked.

Religious leaders across Nigeria are rewriting centuries-old practices to protect women from violence, training clergy to spot abuse and adding prevention to premarital counseling. The movement is spreading across 23 African countries, proving that cultural change happens from the inside out.

Key organizations in Nigeria's Ebonyi State just agreed to work together using one clear system to help survivors of gender-based violence and child trafficking. The new framework means victims will get faster help and better care no matter where they go first.

A global coalition of over 100 organizations from 40 countries is calling on the World Health Organization to treat gun violence as a preventable public health emergency, not just a criminal justice issue. The movement, inspired by survivors like South African activist who lived 40 years with a gunshot disability, aims to save lives through the same public health approach that reduced tobacco deaths worldwide.

London police are now knocking on doors to personally check on domestic violence victims, making protective orders actually work. Early results show arrests and charges for domestic violence up 82% in one year.

Botswana is launching specialized centers where survivors of gender-based violence can access medical care, legal help, counseling, and support all in one place. The initiative aims to end the fragmented system that once forced survivors to navigate multiple agencies alone.

A Florida county is recruiting community volunteers to spread awareness about violence prevention and connect neighbors with life-saving support services. Training starts May 20 for those who want to make their community safer.

After gunfire hit an apartment in Lexington's Eastland area, community volunteers are going door to door with help. They're bringing resources for mental health, jobs, and mediation to neighbors who need support.

A Boston hospital program that supports shooting and stabbing survivors has cut their risk of future violence by half. The findings could help cities nationwide reduce gun violence through targeted hospital interventions.
A new initiative in Tasmania is turning overwhelming statistics into personal action by inviting everyone to make public pledges toward ending gendered violence. Justice For Her creates measurable commitments that bring communities together to tackle a crisis affecting one in three women.

Nigerian law enforcement and justice officials are getting specialized training to prosecute school-based gender violence cases and protect child survivors. The program, backed by the European Union, aims to hold offenders accountable and make schools safer across the country.
%2Ffile%2Fattachments%2Forphans%2F5-4_110014.jpg)
A groundbreaking program in South Africa is proving that when boys have safe spaces to heal from trauma, violence drops and lives are saved. The results challenge everything we thought about why boys don't ask for help.

More than 3,500 people in Pemba, Tanzania gathered for honest conversations about ending gender-based violence, with three-quarters of participants under 30. The community-led dialogues tackled tough topics like economic inequality and harmful stereotypes head-on.
Showing 20 of 7000