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Male Survivors

Male survivors of sexual violence and abuse (SVA): Barriers and facilitators to reporting and accessing services

Male Survivors · 06/03/2023 ·

Sexual violence and abuse (SVA) is most typically presented as a gender-based problem due to the higher prevalence and incidence rates recorded for women. This has led to male victimisation being overlooked in research, practice and policy, despite international statistics demonstrating that a significant number of men experience SVA across their lifespan.

In this research project we move past the question of “how many men have experienced SVA?” and instead we aimed to understand the barriers and facilitators to reporting and accessing support services for adult male survivors of SVA.

The lack of knowledge about the experience of marginalised groups, who are over-represented in the victimisation statistics, led us to investigate the problem across a diverse range of male survivors across the broad helpseeking process (including disclosure to anybody through to reporting and accessing a range of services). Therefore, the findings can inform the design of services for male survivors broadly and lay the foundations for further nuanced explorations of subgroups with specific demographic characteristics.

Three questions were addressed in this report:

  1. What are the demographic characteristics of the male survivors who took part in the study and how had they sought help?
  2. How had the male survivors experienced barriers and facilitators to helpseeking?
  3. How do service workers’ views on barriers and facilitators to helpseeking compare to the male survivors’ experiences?

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Women’s Refuge comes to aid of group dealing with violent men

Male Survivors · 28/02/2023 ·

On Christmas Day last year, men’s welfare worker Philip Chapman decided he had had enough dealing with police safety orders.

The director of Nelson’s Male Room had spent six years sorting out a place to live and counselling for men who had been told to leave the family household because of incidents of family violence.

“After six years of working weekends, I decided I was done”, Chapman said.

When Nelson Women’s Refuge manager Diane Strong (Ngāti Tama, Te Ātiawa) caught wind of this, she immediately “just picked up my handbag, and walked over to the Male Room”, and offered Chapman around $15,000 in funding for a year’s contract.

Chapman said police safety orders were the “perfect opportunity” for some early intervention.

He said the Women’s Refuge funds were not just dealing with the orders but also provided a room at Franklyn Village as well.

“It really should be coming out of the government coffers for early intervention into family violence. The justice system should be paying for it but they’re not.”

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Linda Clark to head ACC client information and privacy review

Male Survivors · 10/11/2021 ·

An independent review into the access and use of client information within ACC will be led by prominent lawyer Linda Clark.

The review was announced after RNZ revealed a group of ACC staff shared and laughed at client information in a private Snapchat group, amid recent concerns around inappropriate access to sensitive claims which relate to sexual abuse.

It follows a decision by ACC management to suspend 14 staff due to alleged inappropriate access and use of client information. This included 12 staff allegedly sharing client information in a private Snapchat group. ACC said internal investigations led by the acting chief executive are now under way.

The terms of reference, released by the Treasury and the ACC board today, show the review will look at two key areas: the number of staff who have access to client information and the alleged inappropriate access and use of client information among staff.

The review will take up to six months to complete, though ACC management would continue to make operational improvements where they were needed.

ACC Board chair Hon Steve Maharey said the board took the privacy and management of customers personal information extremely seriously.

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3 Things “Leaving Neverland” Reveals about Male Childhood Sexual Abuse

Male Survivors · 19/04/2021 ·

As a therapist who works primarily with male survivors of sexual abuse, I am grateful for the conversations that Leaving Neverland has sparked. As a society, we have still yet to fully understand or recognise how boys and men experience sexual assault and/or abuse.

The reality is that one in six boys will experience sexual abuse before the age of sixteen. Although much research has shown that girls tend to be sexually abused more frequently than boys, the rate at which men experience sexual victimisation during childhood is not insignificant. The sexual abuse of boys is common, underreported, unrecognised, and under-treated.

These are the needed conversations that Leaving Neverland is sparking, drawing back the curtain on the realities of male sexual abuse.

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