22 min

The Signal for Help Alright, Now What?

    • Non-Profit

This bonus episode will get you up to speed on what's been going on with the Signal for Help, a simple one-handed gesture you can make without leaving a digital trace. It means "I need you to check in with me safely." We launched it in April 2020 in response to an increased risk of gender-based violence in the pandemic. By July 2020, 1 in 3 people in Canada knew about it or saw it being used and it had gone viral all over the world ... including on Tik Tok. Last week, we learned of a missing 16-year-old girl in the United States who used it in distress in a moving car and someone saw her and called 911. She was helped out of a dangerous situation and the person driving the car was arrested. We have gotten a lot of media interest in the Signal for Help and on the broader issue of what it means to support survivors of violence. Suzanne Duncan, Vice-President of Philanthropy at the Canadian Women's Foundation, addresses this huge spike in interest and what we can do to transform our culture of stigma to a culture of support.

More on the Signal for Help: canadianwomen.org/signal-for-help

Visit our website and donate today: canadianwomen.org

Facebook: Canadian Women’s Foundation

Twitter: @cdnwomenfdn

LinkedIn: The Canadian Women’s Foundation

Instagram: @canadianwomensfoundation

More about Alright, Now What? Podcast: canadianwomen.org/podcast

This bonus episode will get you up to speed on what's been going on with the Signal for Help, a simple one-handed gesture you can make without leaving a digital trace. It means "I need you to check in with me safely." We launched it in April 2020 in response to an increased risk of gender-based violence in the pandemic. By July 2020, 1 in 3 people in Canada knew about it or saw it being used and it had gone viral all over the world ... including on Tik Tok. Last week, we learned of a missing 16-year-old girl in the United States who used it in distress in a moving car and someone saw her and called 911. She was helped out of a dangerous situation and the person driving the car was arrested. We have gotten a lot of media interest in the Signal for Help and on the broader issue of what it means to support survivors of violence. Suzanne Duncan, Vice-President of Philanthropy at the Canadian Women's Foundation, addresses this huge spike in interest and what we can do to transform our culture of stigma to a culture of support.

More on the Signal for Help: canadianwomen.org/signal-for-help

Visit our website and donate today: canadianwomen.org

Facebook: Canadian Women’s Foundation

Twitter: @cdnwomenfdn

LinkedIn: The Canadian Women’s Foundation

Instagram: @canadianwomensfoundation

More about Alright, Now What? Podcast: canadianwomen.org/podcast

22 min