Women
Abuse Council of Toronto
Farzana
Chowdhury
Many thousands of Canadian women experience poverty and violence every
day. As each year passes, many more join those women. Violence against
women knows no geographical, cultural or linguistic boundaries and it
affects all women without regard to their level of income. However,
for many women, poverty adds another dimension to the pain and suffering
they experience as a result of violence. Poverty limits choices and
access to the means to protect and free oneself from violence. It also
means more barriers to using services and programs that can help. Low-income
women comprise a group with unique needs. This has implications for
the community groups and agencies that work with them.
Women Abuse Council
of Toronto is a policy development and planning organisation whose mandate
is to improve the effectiveness of the community response to woman abuse.
The Council evolved
out of a community need to develop a more coordinated approach to woman
abuse in Toronto. It was recognised that while there was a range of
existing services for assaulted women and their families, as a whole,
the services were fragmented, inconsistent and uncoordinated. The fragmentation
of such services has an impact on the quality, consistency and accountability
of services received by women. Among various programs they have a project
named Women's Court Watch Project.
The Women's Court
Watch Project is an initiative of the Women's Abuse Council where women
survivors, volunteers and students observe domestic violence trials
in all of the five courts across Toronto to monitor judge's decisions
and to compare the effectiveness of the specialised domestic violence
courts.
The main reason
of implementing the program was to:
Raise public awareness of issues within the judiciary and the courts
about the response to woman abuse cases.
Explore and uncover biases of judges and hold judges accountable to
their responses and conduct to victims of abuse.
To provide women survivors of abuse an opportunity to participate in
changes to the criminal justice system.
Collect information about the availability of court support services
to victims of abuse. To share resources and information with agencies
supporting women survivors while also presenting feedback about the
courts and services available to women to the greater community.
Compare the situation in the courts over a three-year period. Each year
an evaluation and recommendations for change will be presented and published.
Volunteers, survivors
and students are involved in the program. The council provides training
sessions explaining the court system, the survey, and woman abuse issues,
etc.
I think the program
is very effective, involving survivors of women abuse is very encouraging
for those who still are going through abuse, and cannot find the courage
to come out. Many women organisations in Bangladesh have taken programs
to deal with women abuse, and offering them assistance to go to court.
But I think if some organisations introduce this type of a Women's Court
Watch Project it would really benefit the women who are going through
abuse and also others, such as students. Students by participating in
a wide specialised family and criminal court monitoring programs, learn
about the court system first hand.
Exploring and uncovering
biases of judges and hold judges accountable to their responses and
conduct to victims of abuse is indeed is a step towards an accountable
judicial system and ultimately a better society for women.
Farzana
Chowdhury is an Advocate.