For Media Inquiries: Chelsea Fuller, VP of Communications, TIME’S UP | [email protected] Denise Beek, Chief Communications Officer, ‘me too.’ International | [email protected] Gillian Branstetter, Media Manager, National Women’s Law Center[...]
Even in a post–Me Too world, survivors of sexual violence know the perils of coming forward. The stigmas endure. And a woman’s word is often not believed. Black women are[...]
Monifa Bandele, chief operating officer of the TIME’S UP Foundation, discusses the new initiative dedicated to supporting Black survivors of sexual violence. Watch on Cheddar.com
Tarana Burke is the founder and executive director of me too. International. The activist launched the movement in 2006 to promote unity among sexual violence survivors. Since then, the hashtag has[...]
Say Her Name. This demand, coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw in 2016, rings louder than ever today as Black women continue to be made invisible within our societal response to violence.[...]
With the social unrest that erupted last summer sparked by the death of George Floyd, and the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement, many individuals and companies united in a collective call[...]
me too. International, the Time’s Up Foundation and the National Women’s Law Center are partnering to launch a new campaign aimed at changing the conversation around sexual violence within the[...]
It’s been more than three years since the #MeToo movement launched a culture-shifting conversation about sexual violence. But Tarana Burke, the activist who gave the movement its name, says[...]
The statistics surrounding Black women sexual assault survivors are daunting. Six in 10 Black women say they have been coerced into sexual contact by the age of 18. At the same[...]