
Reading about prevention is one thing.
Building it requires people.
Five ways to become part of the movement, from a single afternoon to a long-term commitment.

The movement only exists because people carry it.

The Sexual Violence Prevention Workshop is not a product. It is a method that has to be re-played, language by language, group by group, conversation by conversation. Each workshop only exists because someone chose to host it. Each translation only exists because someone chose to maintain it. Each country covered is the work of a real person — often someone who started as a curious visitor on this very page.
Below are five ways to get involved, in increasing order of commitment. None is more important than another — the project needs all of them.


1. Attend a workshop
The most direct way to engage: spend two hours in a workshop near you, with people from your community. You’ll leave with a clearer understanding, a sharper vocabulary, and one concrete action to take with you.

For companies, schools, healthcare teams, volunteer organisations, families, neighbourhoods. Bring the workshop to your group — we connect you with a trained facilitator, or help you train one of your own.

3. Become a facilitator
You don’t need to be an expert. You need the method, a few hours of preparation, and a small group ready to think with you. The book contains everything: script, posture guidance, and the cards.

4. Become a regional representative
Lead the project in your country or region. Build a local network of facilitators, adapt communication to your culture, organise events, and become the project’s local face. A meaningful long-term commitment.

5. Donate
Translation, free downloads, infrastructure, subsidised workshops in places that can’t afford them. Every action of the project has a cost. Your donation lets us cover it without compromising on independence or rigor.

A note on commitment.
The five paths above are listed from light to deep, but they are not exclusive. Many of our facilitators started by attending a workshop. Many of our regional representatives started by facilitating a few sessions. Many donors are former participants who simply want the project to continue.
Wherever you start is the right place.
