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Research Project. Forced Marriage and Honour based Violence. A Trafford Perspective. Anesha Pandor Farah Khan. The EMY Project. The Empowering Muslim Youth Project Established to engage, enable and empower youth and communities from Muslim and non Muslim faiths.
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Research Project Forced Marriage and Honour based Violence. A Trafford Perspective. Anesha Pandor Farah Khan
The EMY Project The Empowering Muslim Youth Project Established to engage, enable and empower youth and communities from Muslim and non Muslim faiths. Offering opportunities for Muslim and non Muslim youth to engage in Activities and Initiatives. Taking into account faith and cultural needs and obligations. Provisions for male and female youth.
The EMY Project:Culture Clicks - Female group • Farah Khan – Culture Clicks Co-ordinator • All Female groups • Muslim and Non Muslim Participants • Confidence Building • Increasing self esteem • Raising aspirations • Empowering and enabling • Increasing civic participation
The EMY Project:Culture Clicks - Female group • Anesha Pandor – Researcher • Trafford related research Projects: • Development of a Mediation service • Hate crime
Research Project Aim/Objectives: • The range of communities that forced marriages occurs in. • Current existing support available in the borough of Trafford • Risk factors within vulnerable groups, • Barriers for individuals in reporting cases and barriers for accessing support and services. • Preventative/protective factors • Recommendations
Nazir Afzal OBE. • Chief prosecutor North West. Crown Prosecution services
Research Project Methodology: • Background literature review • Stakeholder interviews- telephone and face to face interviews (Statutory and voluntary organisations) • Focus groups- 78 participants • Online survey- 220 responses
Forced Marriage Definition • A forced marriage “is a marriage conducted without the valid consent of both parties where duress is a factor.” • There is a difference between a forced marriage and an arranged marriage.
Honour Based Violence • The CPS and police definition of Honour Based Violence: ‘A crime or incident which has or may have been committed to protect or defend the honour of the family and or community’
1. Communities that Forced Marriages Occurs in • Forced marriages are seen as occurring across a wide range of communities and cultures. • Research findings of top three communities affected: 1. Asian 74.6% 2. Middle Eastern 52.4% 3. Somali 49.2%
Communities that Forced Marriages Occurs in • Forced marriages are seen as being associated to specific faith groups. • 46.5% associated with faith • 37.4% associated with no faith • 17.6% unsure
Recurring Themes “ Yes we think it is common, most people know but stay quiet. They cover and say it was an arranged marriage not forced; it never crosses our mind that they could have been pressured into the marriage. “ “There is an issue but we are not aware of it as people don’t talk about it.” “People don’t talk about it, its taboo .....”
2. Trafford Services Two support services specifically located in Trafford. • Trafford Victim Support, • Trafford Women’s Aid. Additional services within Greater Manchester : • Independent Choices • Manchester Women’s Aid • Saheli • Pakistani Resource Centre
Stakeholders Services being provided: • Emergency Accommodation • Referral and signposting • Outreach work • IDVA Service • Advice and Support
Challenges for services • Lack of funding and resources • Multi - agency working • Difficulties in prosecution • Risk of individual personal safety when working with communities • Lack of awareness and education
Challenges • Working with vulnerable children and adults • Victim retraction • Difficulties in identifying honour based violence cases • Language barriers
3.Risk Factors within Vulnerable Groups • Gender – Specifically young women • Family- traditions and cultures • Strengthening family ties • Protecting family honour • Poverty, • Disability.
4.Barriers to Reporting • Specific groups – disability, NRPF etc. • Fear of repercussions – Shame, Dishonour, Ostracised • Legal implications- Criminalization • Lack of awareness • Services- Culturally sensitive, Confidentiality, Training.
Online Survey • 60.5% highlighted Fear of speaking out/dishonouring family as the main barrier in reporting. • 51.7 % highlighted a combination of all the options given as a barrier. • Isolation overseas. • lack of specialist services. • language barriers . • lack of information.
Recurring Themes Trust – “I wouldn’t ring anyone official I think I would be scared to talk to the police or someone like that. I might talk to a teacher or a close family member someone who I thought I could trust.” “The biggest worry I would have is the risk of getting turned away by the police or any other person who I seek advice/help from.”
Recurring Themes Lack of cultural awareness/understanding “Police- first thing Police go to is parents.” “Police can be like a bull in a china shop.” “They need to be aware of Asian community, downplay- not make a scene,.” “Not putting everyone in the same basket, all mixed, Gujarati, Sikh.”
5.Preventative/Protective Factors • Community engagement- Establishing trust. • Training and awareness for professionals. • Culturally sensitive support. • Raising awareness and education in schools. • Empowering young people. • Engaging religious leaders. • Establishing safe places for workshops and drop in services.
5.Preventative/Protective factors-Online Survey The top three factors government should focus on to help victims: • 60.7% - raise public awareness and campaigns. • 55.1% - more support services for victims. • 40.4% - prevention awareness in schools. Should there be more awareness around this issue? • 88.4% - Yes
Awareness – Focus groups Majority of participants ( 97.5%) from focus groups were unaware of: Any specialist support services and help lines. What to do if they were in this situation . Forced marriage was seen as an issue but a “taboo” subject
Awareness – Online 34.3% Would NOT know who to contact 25.8% Were unsure Participants preferences differed in their ways of seeking support 62.4% - Would seek support and help from trusted friends and family, 58.4% - Internet, 56.2% - Police, 52.8% - telephone help lines
Findings • Lack of public awareness and education in schools • Lack of a clear and co-ordinated localised strategy • Training and skills gap • Lack of Routine Enquiry • Need long-term Support Provision • Lack of local data sources, recording and monitoring
Conclusion Lack of : • Forced marriage & Honour based violence awareness. • Education within schools/colleges. • Professional training. • Recorded information. • Localised strategy : Awareness, training, monitoring, • Community engagement- Trust • Funding and resources for specialist services
Recommendations Training • Trafford multi-agency strategy • Integrate FM and HBV Training within pre existing safeguarding training. • Staff to include FM and HBV as a routine enquiry to identified groups. • Develop training for frontline staff.
Recommendations Services • Develop long term support provision • Provide resources to sustain existing services • Using existing best practices to develop future specialist services to address gaps identified. • Establish safe spaces for women to access services and support
Recommendations • Establish a consistent and integrated recording and monitoring system. • Improve data collection and recording
Recommendations Improving Prevention and raising awareness : Schools and colleges, social media, public campaigns, Community engagement- religious leaders Develop a single point of contact helpline for Trafford services.
3 Step Approach • Education • Community engagement • Public campaigns • Work with Religious leaders. • Confidential • Sustainable • Culturally sensitive • Face to face • Helpline • online support • After care support • Counselling Multi Agency strategy • Identification • Risk • Referrals • Monitoring • Embed within existing training
Thank you Any Questions?
Contact details Gir Alam EMY Project Manager 07507254777 theemyproject@yahoo.co.uk Farah Khan theemyproject@yahoo.co.uk cultureclicks@yahoo.co.uk 07912507950 Anesha Pandor cultureclicks@yahoo.co.uk