In the Sex, Rights and Pleasure Lab we will see teams of students
creating new interventions to digitally mediated gender based and
sexual violence, using a sexual health rights approach that highlights
the importance of the possibility of having pleasurable and safe
sexual experiences, free of coercion, discrimination and violence for
all persons. With the help of the designers, researchers and marketing
experts they will develop interventions –technical or social or
a combination - which they pitch to senior international gender
research specialists and record these on film to an expert jury and a
general audience on the internet. The best interventions will be
selected to compete for the Sex, Rights and Pleasure Lab Public Award
and a £200 cash prize. The Sex, Rights and Pleasure Lab takes place
at the University of Sussex from Tuesday 17 to Friday 20 January 2017.
Across the four days the workshop will bring together a range of
students (social sciences, engineering, medical sciences, media
studies, and computer sciences) with commercial and non-profit
designers, marketing and media experts, sex educators and researchers
working internationally on gender and digital technology. Agenda:
Tuesday 17th January 09:00 Registration 09:30 Introduction and ground
rules 10:00 Introduction to digitally-mediated sexual and gender
violence (Pauline Oosterhoff, Research Fellow, IDS and Frances Ridout,
Deputy Director, Legal Advice Centre) 11:00 Facilitated discussion:
How do we recognise digitally-mediated sexual and gender violence?
(Kerry Smith – Head of Girls Rights and Youth, Plan
International UK) 13:00 Break for lunch 14:00: Digitally-mediated
sexual and gender violence: what is happening on campus? (Andrea
Cornwall, Deputy Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Equalities and Diversity and
Grainne Gahan, Students’ Union) 15:00 Thinking about design:
from concept to product (Kelly Shephard, Head of Open Knowledge and
Digital Services, IDS) 16:00 Facilitated discussion: students to
discuss their ideas and groups are formed (Kelly Shephard, Head of
Open Knowledge and Digital Services, IDS) Wednesday 18th January 09:30
Welcome back and recap 10:00 World Café : Introduce the
experts.Students will be asked to think about their theme and will be
asked to move around the tables of experts – moving on when a
bell rings – they will need to pose the issue to the expert and
ask them: What is the existing evidence in this area? Experts include:
Esther Kissiedu Social Media and Digital Manager, MTV Shuga, MTV
Staying Alive Foundation, UK Caryn Gooi Global Professional Relations
Manager - Sexual Wellbeing at RB (Durex) UK Simon Oboler Global
Digital Manager - Health Wellbeing at RB (Durex) UK Kerry Smith, Head
of Girls Rights and Youth Plan International UK Cheryl Overs,
international sex workers rights activist and researcher IDS Frances
Ridout Deputy Director & Barrister Legal Advice Centre, Queen Mary
University of London Andrea Cornwall, Deputy Pro-Vice-Chancellor,
Equalities and Diversity, University of Sussex Pauline Oosterhoff,
Research Fellow, Gender and Sexuality IDS Becky Faith, Research
Officer, Digital Cluster IDS Dan Glass, UK queer HIV activist Lyndsay
Burtonshaw, activist, Safer Sussex and Role Models project Kelly
Shepherd, Head of Open Knowledge and Digital Services unit, IDS
Vivienne Benson, Communications Officer IDS Carol Smithyes,
Communications Officer IDS Beki Aly, international LGBT activist
Stephen Wood, Research Officer, Gender and Sexuality, IDS Nichi
Hodgson, journalist and former dominatrix Catherine Mueller, Research
Fellow, Gender and Sexuality IDS 13:00 Break for lunch 14:00 Students
will be given space and guidance to thrash out ideas. Experts
circulate the room to help support ideas. By end of the day students
need to be clear about: What is the issue that you wish to address?
What tools/ formats would you need to address this? Who is the
audience? Why should people care? How would you reach them? 15:00
World Café : Introduce the interventions. Students will present
their interventions and experts will be asked to move around the
tables to give input to these ideas 16:00 Reflection and wrap-up
Thursday 19th January 09:30 Welcome back and recap 10:00 How to pitch
your idea, presenting and sharing (IDS Communications Team) 11:00
Students work on their ideas/presentations 12:00 Break for lunch 13:00
Building support on social media (Stephen Wood, IDS) 14:00 Peer-review
session. Teams present to each other for feedback 15:00 Teams rehearse
presenting to IDS Communications Team for feedback 16:00 Allocation of
filming slots Friday 20th January 09:30 Welcome back, evaluation and
feedback 10:00-15:00 Filming slots as allocated on Thursday 10th
February Online voting of the YouTube films ends 14th February Winning
student teams awarded with prize at event to on Valentine’s day
to coincide with the launch of the IDS Bulletin ‘Sex Education
in the Digital era’
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21/01/2017 Last update