There has been a lot of energy from community around preventing violence against women in recent weeks, and men are showing up.of Australians rallied against gender-based violence in response to a sharp rise in the number of women killed so far this year.
Matt Tyler, executive director of The Men's Project at Jesuit Social Services, has also observed men's growing interest in affecting change. "We've seen a real uptick at a community level, sports coaches, teachers, parents, wanting us to engage with them on what role they can be playing to prevent violence," Mr Tyler says."Men have a unique role in the sense they are actually in positions of power in our community, they have opportunities to be a role model, and to join the movement of everyone being free of those stereotypes.
"Doing it in a way that maybe uses humour, or appeals to the better nature of someone, like: 'Mate, I know you're better than that, I reckon we could drop that.'"Men should be thinking about the role they play as a father, in the community, and in the workplace, says Ms McDuff. "Again, it's gendered; 24 per cent of men engaged in that type of harassment versus 7 per cent of women," Ms McDuff says.
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