Summary
The National Strategy on Community Safety
and Crime Prevention aims to prevent crime through a social development
approach with four priority groups: children, youth, Aboriginal
communities, and women and girls’ personal security. Making
women’s personal security a priority allows a gender element
to be integrated into all work undertaken by the NCPC.
The emphasis is on the prevention of
victimization by preventing youth from becoming involved in criminal
acts in the first place.
There is a gap in research on women and girls’ security.
Gender-based analyses allow projects and models to be developed
which are tailored to different situations or concerns, for example
problems within large companies or awareness-building and education
in communities.
It is necessary to find sources of sustainable funding and to
create mechanisms for networking or places for exchange between
local groups and national authorities. If we want to develop national
strategies that truly reflect local realities, work must begin
from the base on the ground in order to then move upward to higher
and broader levels.
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