Men As Peacemakers

Getting men off the sidelines and involved in Making Peace

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Minnesota Men's Action Network

  • Download our Here's Where We Start booklet (PDF)
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  • Learn about what you can do to help (PDF)

Sexual Violence: Whose Problem Is It Anyway?

Top Ten Reasons from the Family Violence Prevention Fund
  • Most men do not agree with men's violence, yet do nothing to challenge or stop it - these men need to be mobilized to prevent violence.
  • Some men are already working to prevent violence but lack support; many more would like to get involved but don't know how.
  • Many women want men to step up and take a stand against violence.
  • Men commit most of the violence - it is up to them to stop it
  • Men are not born violent-they become violent as a result of beliefs and norms about what it means to be a man. Work with men and boys can change these beliefs and norms and support men in rejecting violence
  • Men have the potential to stop violence. Not only can they choose to not perpetrate acts of violence, they can choose to challenge the attitudes and assumptions that support gender-based violence.
  • Gender-based violence continues despite years of antiviolence work. The missing piece is effective violence prevention work with men. (For statistics on violence in the United States, see Get the Facts.)
  • Men experience violence too-many are survivors but few get the support they need to heal from their experience. (See RAINN Statistics for data on men experiencing sexual assault.)
  • Men and boys listen to their peers-we need to mobilize men and boys to spread the violence prevention message in their families, workplaces, and communities.
  • Decision makers and opinion leaders are mostly men-we need to work with them to get the political, financial, and moral support necessary to prevent gender-based violence.
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  • 205 W 2nd St # 15   Duluth, MN 55802
  • 218 727-1939
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