Jeans For Justice


Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope.

Throughout the month of April 2011 you can find the display at the Link Center in Tupelo. There is no charge to view the jeans, and if the display moves you, come out to our “Jeans for Justice Painting Party” sponsored by the Tupelo Women’s Club on Sunday, April 10th from 2PM until 4 PM at the Link Center in Tupelo. You can create your own pair of jeans to help send a message about violence. Jeans will become a part of a traveling exhibition that touches the lives of many people in northeast Mississippi.



S.A.F.E., Inc.  takes part in “Jeans for Justice” in several ways:

Our Fundraiser

  • We encourage people to wear jeans to work on Friday April 29th & make a donation to S.A.F.E. Inc.
  • Get your workplace involved! We provide you with posters, Sexual Assault Awareness Month pins and information to host your own “Jeans for Justice” event.
  • Please register online www.safeshelter.net/justice/ or call (662) 841-2273

Mobile Art Exhibits

  • View the “Jeans for Justice” art exhibit at Tupelo’s Link Centre in the month of April. Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope.

  • Come and paint with the Tupelo Women’s Club “Jeans for Justice” Paint Party. Sunday, April 10th from 2PM until 4 PM at the Link Centre in Tupelo. You can create your own pair of jeans to help send a message about violence. Jeans will become a part of a traveling exhibition that touches the lives of many people in northeast Mississippi.

 

  • Come and paint at the “Jeans for Justice” Paint Party hosted by the Daily Corinthian Newspaper in Corinth, Mississippi 10AM-2 PM Saturday April 16th. You can create your own pair of jeans to help send a message about violence. Jeans will become a part of a traveling exhibition that touches the lives of many people in northeast Mississippi.

 

Sexual Assault Awareness Films

This year we are trying something new. We are screening two films about sexual violence in the Black Box Theater at the Link Centre in Tupelo.  This event will be held on Tuesday, April 12 and will begin at 6:30 PM. There is no cost for this event.

We will show these films as well as a short film about the S.A.F.E., Inc. “Jeans for Justice” Exhibit.

“Asking for it: The Ethics and Erotics of Sexual Consent”

The line between sexual consent and sexual coercion is not always as clear as it seems — and according to Harry Brod, this is exactly why we should approach our sexual interactions with great care. Brod, a professor of philosophy and leader in the pro-feminist men’s movement, offers a unique take on the problem of sexual assault, one that complicates the issue even as it clarifies the bottom-line principle that consent must always be explicitly granted, never simply assumed. In a nonthreatening, non-hectoring discussion that ranges from the meanings of “yes” and “no” to the indeterminacy of silence to the way alcohol affects our ethical responsibilities, Brod challenges young people to envision a model of sexual interaction that is most erotic precisely when it is most thoughtful and empathetic.

“Spin the Bottle: Sex, Lies and Alcohol”

Spin the Bottle offers an indispensable critique of the role that contemporary popular culture plays in glamorizing excessive drinking and high-risk behaviors. Award-winning media critics Jackson Katz and Jean Kilbourne contrast these distorted representations with the often disturbing and dangerous ways that alcohol consumption affects the lives of real young men and women. Illustrating their analysis with numerous examples, Katz and Kilbourne decode the power and influence these seductive media images have in shaping gender identity, which is linked to the use of alcohol.

 

Friday, April 29th 2011 is S.A.F.E. Inc.

”Jeans for Justice” Day!

“Jeans for Justice,” in its fourth year in this area allows businesses make donations to our local rape crisis center in exchange for allowing their staff to wear jeans to work on Friday, April 29, 2011. Each participating business receives a poster to display in their office which will provoke discussion and education around the issue of sexual assault. The purpose of the poster is to provide a fixture to spark discussion for employees “around the water cooler” so to speak on the issues of sexual assault and the judicial system.

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A short history of  “Jeans for Justice”

 

In 1999, a judge in Italy overturned the 1998 rape conviction of a 45 year-old driving instructor who had been convicted of raping his 18-year-old student. A lower court had sentenced the defendant to 2 years and eight months in prison but the appeals court sent the case back for retrial and a higher court overturned the ruling on the basis of what the victim was wearing. The higher court ruled that it is impossible to take off tight pants such as jeans “without the cooperation of the person wearing them”, and said it was impossible if the victim is struggling. The court also doubted the testimony of the victim because she waited several hours to tell her parents she had been attacked.

Following the ruling, a group of female Italian lawmakers wore jeans to parliament. This action prompted women all over Italy to join in a “skirt strike” and wear jeans. Female TV personalities known for chic dress began to don only denim. A housewives’ federation offered a prize to any designer who could come up with “easy off jeans” and planned a jean march to the justice ministry. Union Official Stefania Sidoli said, “We thank the court for having enriched women’s wardrobes with a new garment. To the business suit and the little black dress, we can now add the anti-rape outfit: a comfortable and resistant pair of jeans.”

Friday, April 29th 2011 is S.A.F.E.’s  ”Jeans for Justice” Day!

Each year, businesses make donations to their local rape crisis centers in exchange for allowing their staff to wear jeans to work on that day. Each participating business receives a poster to display in their office which will provoke discussion and education around the issue of sexual assault. The purpose of the poster is to provide a fixture to spark discussion for employees “around the water cooler” so to speak on the issues of sexual assault and the judicial system.

Here’s a little background on the cause:

In 1999, a judge in Italy overturned the 1998 rape conviction of a 45 year-old driving instructor who had been convicted of raping his 18-year-old student. A lower court had sentenced the defendant to 2 years and eight months in prison but the appeals court sent the case back for retrial and a higher court overturned the ruling on the basis of what
the victim was wearing. The higher court ruled that it is impossible to take off tight pants such as jeans “without the cooperation of the person wearing them”, and said it was impossible if the victim is struggling. The court also doubted the testimony of the victim because she waited several hours to tell her parents she had been attacked.

Following the ruling, a group of female Italian lawmakers wore jeans to parliament. This action prompted women all over Italy to join in a “skirt strike” and wear jeans. Female TV personalities known for chic dress began to don only denim. A housewives’
federation offered a prize to any designer who could come up with “easy off jeans” and planned a jean march to the justice ministry. Union Official Stefania Sidoli said, “We thank the court for having enriched women’s wardrobes with a new garment. To the business suit and the little black dress, we can now add the anti-rape outfit: a comfortable and resistant pair of jeans.”

Protests have now gone global and are currently

taking place today in the form of  “Jeans for Justice.”

S.A.F.E., Inc.  takes part in “Jeans for Justice” in two ways:

Our Fundraiser

  • We encourage people to wear jeans to work on Friday April 29th & make a donation to S.A.F.E. Inc.
  • Get your workplace involved! We provide you with posters,  Sexual Assault Awareness Month pins and information to host your own “Jeans for Justice” event. Please email sonja@safe_comcast.net or call (662) 841-2273 OR register online  www.safeshelter.net/justice/

Mobile Art Exhibits

  • View the “Jeans for Justice” art exhibit at the Link Center in the month of April. Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope.
  • Come and paint with the Tupelo Women’s Club “Jeans for Justice” Paint Party. Sunday, April 10th from 2PM until 4 PM at the Link Center. You can create your own pair of jeans to help send a message about violence. Jeans will become a part of a traveling exhibition that touches the lives of many people in northeast Mississippi.

S.A.F.E., Inc, in partnership with the Ecru Police Department will be displaying the “Jeans for Justice” exhibit throughout the month of February . On Monday February 7th there will be a showing of two films about teen dating violence starting at 6PM on Monday February 7th. The display and films will be shown in the 4,800 square-foot police department building located just behind town hall.

February is Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month

S.A.F.E., Inc, in partnership with the Ecru Police Department will be showing two films about teen dating violence starting at 6PM on Monday February 7th. The films will be shown in the 4,800 square-foot police department building located just behind town hall.

Dangerous Relationships (29 minutes)

Young people need clear, self-affirming guidelines to understand their choices when a relationship turns unhealthy or destructive. Through a series of dramatizations, viewers see a “blueprint” of an unhealthy relationship between a young couple as it grows progressively more intense. Topics include the early danger signs to watch for, such as irrational jealousy, violent outbursts, emotional manipulation, physical intimidation, and physical abuse.

10 Signs of Relationship Abuse (28 minutes)

Combining powerful interviews of battered and verbally abused teens with expert commentary, video delivers key facts about dating abuse. Emotional abuse includes isolation from friends, family, and outside activities; using insulting names or degrading terms; displaying jealousy and possessiveness; controlling a partner’s clothing choices and behavior; using excessive cell phone use to monitor behavior; and threatening self-harm to control behavior. Sexual and physical abuse includes extreme roughhousing; pushing, grabbing, restraining, and other violent behaviors that don’t leave marks or bruises; touching a partner’s body in ways that make him/her feel uncomfortable; and making threats as a means of coercing a partner’s consent to sexual activity. Teen speakers and dating abuse experts offer helpful advice on how teens can get away from potentially unhealthy relationships.

There is no cost for this event and participants will be provided with handouts about dating violence and community resources where they can get free help or counseling. The S.A.F.E., Inc community educator will be on hand to answer any questions.

This film showing will be in conjunction with the “Jeans for Justice” display.

jeans for justice
Click here to see more articles about “Jeans for Justice”

Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope. This group of yearbook students volunteered to make jeans & they will display them at their school before donating them to the S.A.F.E., Inc exhibit.




Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope.

Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope.   “Jeans for Justice” are on display in the meeting room at the Iuka Public Library through the month of October.

jeans for justice

Click here to find out about "Jeans for Justice"

Click here to learn about the Iuka Public Library

Jeans painted with messages about violence have been created by residents of northeast Mississippi from a wide variety of backgrounds and age groups in conjunction with our annual “Jeans for Justice” fund-raiser. The jeans reflect the individual artists’ feelings about violence in our community. Some jeans honor victims of violent crime, others state facts and statistics, and others send a message of hope.   “Jeans for Justice” are on display upstairs AND downstairs in the George E. Allen Library through the month of August.

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