Site icon The Consent Workshop

The Bystander Approach

The Consent Workshop The Bystander Approach
Share TCW

Society does not do a great job at condemning sexual assault publicly. This is especially in moments where we are not directly affected. We know it should not be happening, but we are slower to respond when it does not happen to us, a friend or a family member. We should not be waiting to be directly affected by tools of the patriarchy, to understand that the urgent need for it to be dismantled. Jackson Katz describes a Bystander as anyone who is not involved in the dyad of abuse but is embedded in peer culture relationships with people who might be in that situation. The general idea with this approach would be a shift in the normalized responsibility of victims to avoid dangerous situations, to pretty much anyone who can intervene .

In simpler words, We are all Bystanders.

The Bystander could witness abuse, hear of abuse or read about abuse. Katz proposes a world where we are all active bystanders in that we advocate for justice regardless of the level of involvement in a given situation.

Everyone knows someone who has been sexually assaulted. Maybe we don’t know them personally, maybe we have heard of a friend of a friend, who is almost always a girl, that has been assaulted. We are all aware (for the most part I like to think) that sexual assault and violence is wrong. The bystander approach rejects the idea that victims of sexual violence and harassment have the sole responsibility to protect themselves. It should not be the same set of people decrying sexual violence all the time. It needs to be all of us.

We at The Consent Workshop have identified 3 things that should ensure that you are an active Bystander.

Being an active bystander includes anything from ensuring that a drunk person at a party gets home safely, to not tolerating rape jokes. The bystander approach is beyond intervening in potentially violent situations, it is a constant contribution to dismantling the culture that makes sexual violence acceptable thus creating a safe environment.

The Consent Workshop.

Photograph by Brandon S / Flickr