3.14.2013

Demand. A documentary from Shared Hope

No comments:
Truth That Hurts......
DEMAND. Documentary (45-minute version) from shared hope on Vimeo.
Toni L.Vossen 2013

This documentary, produced by Shared Hope International, focuses on demand factors for sex trafficking, one of the most significant being pornography. It also addresses how all forms of commercial sexual exploitation such as pornography, stripping and prostitution are connected to all other forms such as sex trafficking and sex slavery.
 Please visit SharedHope.org to learn more about how demand for sex trafficking is created by those individuals (mostly men) who purchase women and children for sex.


Shared Hope’s domestic WIN training program

No comments:
Truth That Hurts...... Toni L.Vossen 2013


Truth That Hurts...... Toni L.Vossen 2013



Domestic WIN Program

Shared Hope’s domestic WIN training program is designed to help women develop skills and gain practical job experience. Typically these women have had difficult life experiences such as domestic abuse, childhood abuse, commercial sexual abuse, drug addiction and/or time in a correctional facility. These experiences have left the women with low self-esteem and lack of employable skills. Many of the women who enter the program have faced homelessness and lost custody of their children due to their life circumstances.
Our nine-month WIN training program, provides opportunity for these women to learn job skills so they can enter/reenter the work force and support themselves and their families. In addition to job skills, the women learn how to work in a professional business environment and develop personal life skills so they can begin to build confidence and self-esteem. The program is based in Vancouver, Washington in our corporate headquarters. Women in the program commit 20-25 hours a week to train on-site and are provided a stipend to off set expenses. The WIN training program is divided into three phases. With each phase, the intern’s skills are assessed and goals are set so she receives a well-rounded experience.
Phase I: The intern is acclimated to the working environment and basic skills are assessed. In this phase, she begins to learn basic office procedures, computer skills, data entry functions, and phone systems. Appropriate office etiquette, professionalism, and collaborative teamwork are essential skills developed in this phase of training.

Phase II: The intern continues to enhance her skills in office procedures, interoffice communication, and general correspondence. The intern also learns to manage challenges which may arise on the job. In addition, she learns how to cope with personal issues while working on techniques to deal with stress, time management, and personal responsibility.
Phase III: During the last phase, the intern may participate in special projects along with continued enhancement of her office skills. This may include basic bookkeeping functions, creating office documents, Internet research, communications functions, and marketing projects. The intern will continue to focus on career exploration as she prepares her resume in preparation to exit the training program. Educational opportunities may also be assessed dependent on the intern’s interest in pursing higher education and a degree program.

How to Apply

Applications are accepted on a continual basis and are assessed as the next opening becomes available. Friends, family, churches and non-government groups refer most interns to the program.
Applicants must submit an application, volunteer for 4 hours and write a letter to assess basic literacy.
For more information and applications details, please contact Maria Campoli or call 360-693-8100.

Email Newsletter Signup


Sign up to receive the latest news and stories from Shared Hope

3.06.2013

Victims' Rights in the 50 States

No comments:
LegislationMegan's Law | Victims' Rights

Victims' Rights in the 50 States
  • In 1999 there were 7,357,060 violent victimizations in the U.S.
  • The U.S. Constitution guarantees more than a dozen rights to those accused of committing crimes.
  • Not one word is written in the U.S. Constitution on behalf of crime victims.
Victims of violent crime in America will not achieve equity in the criminal justice system until the U.S. Constitution guarantees their right to be treated with fairness, dignity and respect. Without diminishing the rights of defendants this modest goal of fundamental fairness, which is exercised by every other class of American, can be achieved through a series of basic guarantees:
  • That victims receive timely notice of any release, escape, and public proceeding involving the crime;
  • That victims not to be excluded from such proceedings;
  • That victims are to be heard at release, plea, sentencing, commutation, and pardon proceedings;
  • That victims are not to be subjected to undue delay, or to decisions that disregard their safety or their just claims to restitution.
It is an unfortunate irony that constitutional rights created to protect the innocent now shield the guilty. Faith in the criminal justice system is routinely undermined by inequity and fear of retribution. When a terrorist receives $10 million to defend his actions but the survivors of his crime must chose between attending his trial and making a victim impact statement we are diminished as a society. Psychopaths and pedophiles spinning through a turnstile system of justice with accelerating rates of violence leave shattered victims in their wake and plague our minds with doubts concerning our own safety. When only nine percent of reported violent crimes are resolved with the perpetrator being incarcerated, criminal justice is perceived as justice for criminals. When this perception infects the majority of innocent people, the process is eroded by a reluctance to cooperate, which fosters still more criminal activity. If we treated offenders as shabbily as we treat victims, it would be considered cruel and unusual punishment.
We should never lightly amend the United States Constitution. However, victims of crime will never be fairly treated by a system that does not afford them equal fundamental rights, and that can only be achieved through constitutional amendment. Thomas Jefferson eloquently stated the need to occasionally modify the ultimate law of the land: "I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions, but laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered, and manners and opinions change; with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times."
1Source: National Crime Victimization Survey; January 2001: NCJ 184938
Truth That Hurts......

Toni L.Vossen 2012

Victime Resources

No comments:
Truth That Hurts......

Victims Resources


Toni L.Vossen 2012

National Center for Missing & Exploited Children

☺ My FrIeNdS ☺

Join Linda Smith and Shared Hope

Join Linda Smith and Shared Hope
in bring awareness to American's & end CHILD ABUSE

Questions Of Mine

What do you find most concerning about your community today?
pollcode.com free polls