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Advancing Equality: Addressing Workplace Harassment through Policy Change in the STEM Sector is an initiative aimed at raising awareness and driving collective action to tackle systemic challenges faced by women in STEM across Ontario. Women in STEM face persistent barriers, including gender bias, discrimination, and sexual harassment, which hinder their success and career progression. This project emphasizes cross-sector collaboration, bringing together industry leaders, survivor advocates, and gender equity experts to conduct research and co-develop impactful, evidence-based solutions. By fostering partnerships across diverse systems, the initiative seeks to create safer, more inclusive workplaces for women.

Learn more about Gendered Microaggressions in STEM
Listen to The STEM Podcast

This project has been funded through Women and Gender Equality Canada’s Women’s Program

It can be challenging to talk about Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) or family violence. Knowing how to respond or start a conversation can make a difference. WomanACT’s C.A.R.E © model provides practical steps to approach these conversations with compassion.

If you or someone you know is at risk, learn how to identify signs of abuse and reach out to local helplines for confidential help and resources. Together, we can support survivors this holiday season, and every day

For more information or to get involved, please contact: info@womanact.ca

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On November 12th, 2024, Harmy Mendoza, the Executive Director of Woman ACT, spoke at the Toronto Police Service Board Meeting about the increasing incidents of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) and Family Violence in Toronto. In alignment with the Toronto Police Service’s recognition and acknowledgment of IPV, coupled with the ongoing community advocacy for Bill 173 – the Intimate Partner Violence Epidemic Act, it is essential to address the rise of intimate partner violence through a collaborative, multi-sectoral approach. This approach should prioritize survivor-centered, trauma-informed practices.

This submission to the Toronto Service Police Board includes several key recommendations, including strengthening coordination across various systems, comprehensive data collection, and building an integrated multi-sector approach. These efforts aim to better prevent, respond to, and support survivors of intimate partner violence.

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We all deserve an Ontario government that is committed to ending gender-based violence.

Note: As of June 5th, 2025 Bill 173 has been re-tabled as Bill 55, Intimate Partner Violence Epidemic Act, 2025

Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is an epidemic in Ontario. We are at a crucial point in getting the Ontario government to pass Bill 173, Intimate Partner Violence Epidemic Act. Passing this Bill would formally recognize IPV as an epidemic in Ontario – acknowledging the widespread and lasting harm that IPV has on survivors, children, family members and communities in general.

The context of this epidemic is well documented and consistently shared by survivors and the organizations who support them (WomanACT, 2024). Given the extensive and lasting impacts on the health and wellbeing of communities, addressing violence as a public health issue is widely regarded as a best practice (World Health Organization, 2016).

We need your help!

WomanACT is launching a community mobilization campaign to amplify the voices of survivors and community members. This is your opportunity to let your Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) know how IPV has impacted you and your family or community.

Use our template to write your own letter or email to your local Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP). This is your chance to share your or your community’s experience of IPV and why addressing IPV is important to you.

Download the email instructions and template to send to your MPP today!

Download as a Word doc

For more information, please contact: Aakanksha Mathur, Manager of Public Policy, Advocacy and Communications at amathur@womanact.ca

Read our endorsed resource package “The Current State of Intimate Partner Violence in Ontario”

Read our Written Submission for the Study on Intimate Partner Violence – Standing Committee on Justice Policy

Economic and financial abuse impacts every part of a survivor’s life, causing stress, anxiety, depression, and a loss of self-esteem. It often leads to poverty, housing instability, and limited career opportunities. The social impacts can include feeling isolated and becoming financially dependent on their partner/spouse. Legal and financial consequences include coerced debt and legal vulnerabilities.

This visual report outlines the social impacts of financial and economic abuse, and real-life examples of survivor experiences.

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While research on financial abuse as a form of intimate partner violence remains limited, financial abuse is commonly used to exert power and control over women, often occurring alongside other types of abuse. This form of abuse is impactful because it strips individuals of financial freedom and independence, with lasting effects such as damaged credit and housing instability. 

This visual report explores what constitutes financial and economic abuse, real-life examples, and practical steps to protect your financial well-being. 

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Housing stability plays a crucial role in the safety and well-being of survivors of gender-based violence (GBV). When faced with renovictions, many women and gender-diverse individuals experience increased housing insecurity, which can exacerbate their vulnerability to further violence. The threat of eviction and displacement not only disrupts their lives but can also deter them from seeking help or leaving abusive situations.

This joint submission by WomanACT and Right to Housing Toronto to the City of Toronto’s Planning and Housing Committee addresses the urgent need for a Rental Renovation Licence Bylaw to mitigate the impacts of renovictions on vulnerable tenants. It outlines the importance of adopting a human rights and trauma-informed approach in the bylaw’s implementation, emphasizing the unique challenges faced by survivors of GBV. The letter offers recommendations to strengthen the proposed framework, including enhanced tenant protections, educational resources for landlords, and support for marginalized communities. By prioritizing these measures, the City can uphold the right to housing and contribute to safer living conditions for all residents.

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Economic abuse affects many women and gender-diverse individuals in Canada, with rates as high as 1 in 3 women experiencing it from intimate partners.

The Economic Abuse Project: Providing a model of improved support for survivors of domestic violence (EASE), is a collaboration between credit specialists, anti-violence organizations, and financial institutions to address the impacts of economic and financial abuse on survivors of domestic violence. It involves support for survivors to rebuild credit and develop financial literacy, brings professionals together to collaborate for financial system change and build the capacity of professionals to recognize and respond to economic abuse. ​

​The project is an adaptation of the UK-developed Domestic Economic Abuse Project (DEAP). The project improved outcomes for victims/survivors of domestic and economic abuse, enhanced understanding of economic abuse and identified areas for system change among the financial sector and other community agencies.

Publications

Infographic: The Experience of Financial Abuse

Infographic: Strategies and Advice from Survivors

Infographic: The Impact of Financial Abuse

Trauma-informed principles in banking technology design

Innovative Practices for Identifying and Responding to Tech-Facilitated Financial Abuse

Infographic: Financial Safety Planning – Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence

Infographic: Economic and Financial Abuse – Key Terms

EASE Design Challenge

NEW!

EASE Design Challenge Report

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This project has been funded through Women and Gender Equality Canada’s Women’s Program

The healthcare system is one of the most used public services by survivors of intimate partner violence, however the barriers to healthcare access are significantly increased for survivors who are older than 55 and living with disabilities. 

The aim of this brief is to increase awareness of the unique needs and experiences of older survivors living with disabilities in accessing and using health services. It offers an intersectional analysis about barriers to access, abuse tactics related to health, experiences with service delivery and health professionals, and how these practices directly and indirectly impact a survivor’s health. 

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On August 14th, 2024, WomanACT’s Executive Director, Harmy Mendoza, spoke at the Province’s Standing Committee on Justice Policy as part of their study on Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). WomanACT emphasized on the importance of adopting a prevention-focused response model to end intimate partner violence and gender-based violence in Ontario.

This written submission details evidence-based literature on the necessity of declaring IPV as an epidemic in Ontario as well as an evaluation from a public health perspective. It elaborates on our policy recommendations focusing on: affordable housing, improved systems collaboration with a focus on prevention, the need for whole-of-society approach to GBV education and bystander training, and addressing the lack of coordinated and comprehensive data and evaluation strategy and open access to GBV data.

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