Approach

Sonke Gender Justice uses various social change strategies to promote a healthy, equal society. These include:

  • Working with government to promote change in policy and practice
  • Community mobilisation
  • Organisational development
  • Community education, including work with the media
  • Individual skills building
  • Monitoring and evaluation, and
  • Building effective networks and coalitions. 

These wide ranging strategies recognise that changing deeply held beliefs about gender roles and relations requires a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach. The social change approach tries to impact on traditions and cultures, government policies, laws and institutions, civil society organisations, the media, the family and economic, political and social pressures.

Successfully affecting these social factors requires networking and co-operation between organisations.

 

Spectrum of Change

Sonke Gender Justice has adopted the Spectrum of Change approach as a planning and programme tool. This approach identifies eight interconnected social change strategies which promote changes at the individual, social, political and economic levels. These strategies are to:

  • Strengthen individual knowledge, skills and leadership capacity
  • Promote community education
  • Foster coalitions and networks
  • Change and strengthen organisational practices
  • Educate providers and key stakeholders
  • Engage in rights-based community mobilisation and advocacy
  • Work with government

Sonke Gender Justice sees the first level as a critical starting point to transforming attitudes and practices within individuals, communities, organisations and public institutions. However work with individuals and small groups is also a starting point for broader social, cultural, legal and political transformation.

 

 

Highlights

The ruling in the Malema Equality Court case will be handed down on15 March 2010
>> read more about the case

 

The final report from the MenEngage Africa Symposium is now available for download.
>> download the report

 

The Sonke case Equality Court against Julius Malema closed on 24 November 2009, with the Magistrate reserving judgement on the matter.
>> find out more about the case
>> read Sonke's case study on the Equality Courts

 

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon today launched the Network of Men Leaders to Combat Violence against Women which includes two South Africans: Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Sonke Gender Justice Network co-director Dean Peacock.
>> press release