The links below contained detailed information for the upcoming 2017 Safe States Alliance Annual Meeting, taking place September 12-14, 2017 in Aurora, Colorado.
Please note:
- A total of five concurrent sessions will take place during the Annual Meeting, and there will be up to five breakouts occurring simultaneously during each of those concurrent sessions. Within each breakout, there will be up to four presentations that take place.
- This online system does not allow us to embed the individual presentations within each breakout. Please note the session presentations listed under each Concurrent Breakout title for associated content.
- The on-site mobile app WILL embed these sessions for ease of use.
- A printable, detailed agenda can be found on the 2017 Annual Meeting website.
- If you have any questions, please contact info@safestates.org
- All session times and locations are tentative and subject to change. Safe States will continue to update these details as changes take place.
Unpacking the Prevention Toybox: Activities for Engaging Community Partners
Learning Objectives
At the completion of this presentation, the participant will be able to:
- Explain the shift in prevention practices meant to impact individual behaviors (1980s-2000s) to primary prevention strategies that address environmental conditions that allow for violence to occur in the first place (2005+);
- Identify six interactive methods for communicating primary prevention theory and practices to organizational staff and community members; and
- Experiment with primary prevention community engagement strategies that can be used to build networks to effectively collaborate to eliminate social problems like violence.
Statement of Purpose
In this workshop we will “unpack” ICADV’s Prevention Toybox by describing the history, purpose and potential audiences for this violence prevention community engagement resource. Participants will be provided with information and resources to facilitate violence prevention project planning, community level violence prevention strategies, multi-sectoral partnerships and program evaluation.
Methods/Approach
As the prevention team at the Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence began to explore prevention strategies at the higher levels of the social ecology we found that we needed more than words to communicate our ideas. Allegories, diagrams and discussion activities were invaluable to our process of making sense of prevention strategies with impact at the upper-levels of the social ecological model. Over time, these tools evolved into the games and discussion activities included in our Prevention Toybox, which we use to engage with audiences all over the world.
Results
It is important to note that these games were not created for the purpose of educating potential victims about the dynamics of healthy and unhealthy relationships. Rather, target audiences are our own organizational staff members and community partners as we collaborate to re-conceptualize our prevention work beyond changing individual-level knowledge and attitudes to focusing on promoting safe, equitable and respectful community environments that deter multiple forms of violence.
Conclusions & Significance to the Field
The United States Navy, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and 180 other agencies in Indiana and across the United States have been trained to use these tools to prevent violence in their communities. The session will provide an overview of the six interactive prevention activities included in the toybox. Workshop members will have the opportunity to engage in one of the games, ask questions, learn about the results and order free materials to use with community members to prevent violence.
Presenters
Cierra Thomas-Williams, Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Biography
Cierra Olivia Thomas-Williams, MA is a Prevention Specialist at Indiana Coalition Against Domestic Violence (ICADV) whose work focuses on priority populations, which includes people with disabilities and youth. Ms. Thomas-Williams works collaboratively with the ICADV prevention team to develop, implement, evaluate and report on strategies supporting Indiana’s sexual violence prevention plan and intimate partner violence prevention plan.