overview
DESCRIPTION
Community Based Strategy for Implementation of the Firearms Law in Quebec: A project sponsored by the National Crime Prevention Centre Coalition for Gun Control. Overview. Background : Coalition,NCPC Project, Firearms Law Trends in Firearm Violence The Problem Role of Community in Solutions. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Community Based Strategy for Implementation of the Firearms Law in Quebec:A project sponsored by the National Crime Prevention Centre
Coalition for Gun Control
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Overview Background : Coalition,NCPC Project, Firearms Law Trends in Firearm Violence The Problem Role of Community in Solutions
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BACKGROUND
The Coalition for Gun Control was founded in 1990
Supported by more than 350 org. in Canada,100 organizations in Quebec
Has worked to pass strong firearms legislation and defend it
Is now focused on implementation
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Objectives of Project
To reduce death, injury and crime with firearms in Quebec as well as improving the perception of safety raise awareness about problem increase engagement of citizens increase participation reduce fear reduce injury, death, crime
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Approach
to develop community based tools which can be used to support implementation of the firearms law in Quebec
focus on vulnerable groups intervention models for
urban contexts (English and French) rural contexts (French)
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Problem Identification and Analysis
Analysis and Causal Factors
Development of Interventions
Implementation
Monitoring and Evaluation
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Identify, And Then, Interrupt, The Causal Chain
We aim to break the chain as early as possible
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Potential Target Regions
Bas Saint-Laurent Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean Québec Estrie Montréal Côte-Nord Montérégie
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Process 1. Work within existing committees and structures
(eg. suicide, crime etc) and engage relevant stakeholders
2. Define problem and opportunities
3. Identify “best practices” and develop appropriate tools (e.g. policies, training, checklists)
4. Building cross-sectoral cooperation to develop and implement strategies
5. Evaluate
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Deliverables (3 years)
Background research on problem, fact-based policies and models
Mobilization of key stakeholders Assess current knowledge, attitudes,
skills Develop models and guidelines Train the trainers Validation and evaluation
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CANADIAN FIREARMS LEGISLATION
Handguns are restricted weapons and have required registration and special permits since the 1930’s. There are 1 million handguns in Canada.
Military weapons were banned in 1977, 1991 and 1995
Licensing gun owners and registration of rifles and shotguns were introduced in 1995
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Licensing
Screening based on identifiable risks Criminal record Knowledge and skill with firearms Mental health Knowing who has guns allows
preventative measures
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Registration ESSENTIAL to enforce licensing (i.e.
preventing licensed individuals from giving guns to unlicensed individuals)=
Assists in preventative action Assists in law enforcement -tracing etc. Licensing and registration discourage
casual ownership and reinforce accountability
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Legislation is ONE tool To reduce the risk those who are a
danger to themselves or others will have access to firearms
Prohibition of firearms where the risk is considered to outweigh the utility
Distinguish legal versus illegal guns
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Status of Law
Public compliance with new Firearms Act continues to strengthen:
2 million (95%) of owners are licensed 7 million (90%) of guns are registered Since Dec.1, 1998, the notification line has received
well over 22,000 calls. This has proven to be an excellent tool for an applicant’s spouse (or others) to share concerns about public safety
Police access the system 1500 times a day
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Supreme Court of Canada “The registration provisions cannot be severed from the rest of the Act. The licensing provisions require everyone who possesses a gun to be licensed; the registration provisions require all guns to be registered. These portions of the Firearms Act are both tightly linked to Parliament’s goal of promoting safety by reducing the misuse of any and all firearms. Both portions are integral and necessary to the operation of the scheme.” (Supreme Court, Reference Regarding Firearms Act (June 2000)
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Support for Gun Control Legislation by RegionJanuary 2003
46-reg
Saskatchewan
Alberta
B.C.
Manitoba
Atlantic
Ontario
Quebec
Total 55 19 7 18
69 16 6 9
58 20 6 15
50 24 7 18
47 15 11 28
45 21 7 26
36 18 7 38
27 22 14 35
Strongly support
Somewhat support
Somewhat oppose
Strongly oppose
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TRENDS IN FIREARM VIOLENCE
1991: 1444 firearm deaths in Canada 2002: 816 firearm deaths Overall firearm death and injury rates
in Canada have declined Murders with rifles and shotguns have
plummeted Rates in Quebec have declined faster
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Source: Deaths Involving Firearms. Wilkins, Kathryn. Statistics Canada Health Reports, Volume 16 Number 4. June 2005
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Source: Deaths Involving Firearms. Wilkins, Kathryn. Statistics Canada Health Reports, Volume 16 Number 4. June 2005
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Year 1991 1995 Latest ChangeTotal firearms deaths 2002
Number 1444 1125 816 -43%Rate per 100,000 5.2 3.8 2.5 -52%Homicides with firearms 2004
Number 271 176 172 -37%Rate per 100,000 0.97 0.6 0.54 -44%Homicides with rifles and shotguns
Number 103 61 37 -64%Rate per 100,000 0.37 0.21 0.12 -68%Homicides with other guns (handguns etc.)
Number 168 115 135 -20%Rate per 100,000 0.6 0.39 0.42 -30%Homicides without guns
Number 485 412 450 -7%Rate per 100,000 1.73 1.39 1.41 -18%
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Homicides of women with firearms
1991 1995 2004
Number 85 43 32 -62%
Rate per 100,000 0.6 0.29 0.2 -67%
Homicides of women without firearms
Number 185 152 166 -10%
Rate per 100,000 1.3 1.02 1.04 -20%
Robberies with firearms 2003
Number 8995 6692 3877 -57%
Rate per 100,000 32 23 12 -63%
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Trends in Firearm Deaths (per 100,000)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
Québec Canada
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Trends in Firearm Homicide Rates (per 100,000)
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Québec Canada
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Trends in Firearm Robbery Rates (per 100,000)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Québec Canada
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Rate of Firearm Robbery
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001
Québec Canada
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ROLE OF COMMUNITY GROUPS IN IMPLEMENTATION
Laws are words on paper Essentials for implementation
reside in the community - Understanding of risks, law, interventions - Issuing/renewing licenses - Removing firearms from high risk situations,
individuals - Motivation to intervene: roles and
responsibilities
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Police
Chiefs Managers Investigators Frontline Officers Specialists - outreach, community
policing, domestic violence Associations
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Education
School Boards Teachers Associations Principals Guidance Counsellors Teachers
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Healthcare
Nurses Pediatricians Emergency Physicians Trauma Physicians Suicide Prevention Experts Psychiatrists Public Health Associations
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Social Services Domestic Violence Workers Psychologists Social Workers Community Organizations Crime Prevention Groups Offender Support Organizations The Public
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THE PROBLEM
Crime, fear Death and injury - homicide, suicide,
accidents Domestic violence
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Number of Firearm Deaths by Type, Quebec, 1990-2003
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
Suicides 344 304 302 292 297 279 294 291 294 259 221 205 188 166
Homicides 87 99 88 74 52 62 65 60 62 62 72 62 29 28
Accidents 15 11 12 8 9 3 5 9 4 7 4 7 4 10
Undetermined
14 11 14 16 5 3 3 1 2 3 9 5 3 2
Total 460 425 416 390 363 347 367 361 362 331 306 279 224 206
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Cost of firearms violence Firearms death and injury is estimated
to cost $6.6 billion per year in Canada Fear of firearms violence can affect
economic development
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Firearm death
Public health experts view firearm death like disease
Firearm death has common cause
Availability and misuse of firearms
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Situation in Quebec Significant variations in the rates of
firearms violence and injury Perception of an increase is not based
on fact The need to raise awareness of the
risks of suicide with firearms Important differences between urban
and rural contexts Need for better control
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Problem: Access to Guns
Firearm deaths rates linked to availability and easy access to guns
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Misconceptions
Some misconceptions are that: Only criminals, gangs misuse firearms Problem is handguns not rifles and
shotguns Homicide is major cause of death with
firearms (not suicide)
Firearms are the most common instrument particular for males
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Regional Variations in Firearm Death
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Ted Miller and Mark Cohen,"Costs of Gunshot and Cut/Stab Wounds in the United States, with some Canadian Comparisons. " Accid Anal Prev 1997; 29 (3): 329-41.
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Firearm Death Rates (per 100,000) In Census Metropolitan Areas
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Crime: Risk FactorsFor some types of crime: disadvantage, inequity etc.
Insecurity (real and perceived)Age and genderAlcohol or substance abuseJob loss or financial problemsMarital breakdownContextual
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Sources of Firearms Vary In rural areas rifles and shotguns are most
often recovered in crime In large urban centres, handguns are more
often recovered More than half of handguns illegally imported
from USA Guns/drugs/financial crimes interconnected
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Problem: Crime Involving Firearms in Canada
Source: Smuggling work groups; Illegal Movement of Firearms (April, 1995)
Canada: Firearms Recovered in Crime
47%
22%
21%
7% 3%
Rifles and shotguns
Airguns, replicas, etc.
Handguns
Other
Sawed off
Proportion of rifles and shotguns recovered in crime is much higher in rural communities
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Rural Context
Rates of death with firearms are higher where there are more firearms
Generally firearms are more available in rural areas
The culture of firearms is different In rural areas suicide is often
committed with firearms
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Virtually Every Illegal Firearm Begins As A Legal Firearm
Legal firearms are sometimes misused by their owners (whether civilians or state officials)
Legal firearms are stolen or illegally sold from civilians, dealers, state stockpiles
Illegal firearms are smuggled in from the other countries
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Opportunity Areas-Policing Increase awareness of gun problem: data
and trend analysis (fact-based decisions and interventions)
Prioritization of gun problem and integration with community policing to build community “ownership”
Taking preventative action - clear procedures: “when in doubt say no”
Think guns in all investigations: crime, suicide, domestic violence
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Problem: Suicide 20% of suicides with firearms - most common
is .22 rifle Quebec rates above national average (240
suicides with firearms every year) Males, youth and elderly at risk Some professions, eg. policing, have particular
firearm risk Regional variations Particular problem in rural areas
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Links to violence - 50% domestic murders with firearms end in suicide
Presence of firearm is correlated with completed suicides - lethality
In Quebec, suicide rates with firearms increases where rate of hunting permits is high
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Regional Variations in Quebec Suicide Rates
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
Taux par 100 000 h.
Laval
Montérégie
Ensemble du Québec
Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean
Lanaudière
Québec
Mauricie-Centre-du-Québec
Nord-du-Québec
Abitibi-Témiscamingue
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Risk Factors Are Known
Previous suicidal behaviour Male Substance and alcohol abuse Mental illness Recent loss Family history etc. BUT MANY DO NOT FIT THE PROFILE -
opportunistic esp. youth
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Opportunity Areas- Suicide Raise awareness about risks of guns
and suicide among public and stakeholders
Routinely ask about access to guns in interventions with people at risk of suicide, and their family. Ask: Do you have access to a gun?
Improve reporting of risks for licensing and continuous checking
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Problem: Domestic Violence
1/3 of murders of women by intimate partners in Canada with guns - 88% long guns
Particular problem in rural areas Risk factors: alcohol, financial
problems, marital breakdown, mental illness
For every death many threatened
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Presence of gun is a threat in itself in conflictWomen represent a higher percentage of victims (30%) than users (15%)Public and stakeholders need information about risks for womenPublic and stakeholders need information about spousal notification line to CFC
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Trends in intimate partner homicide
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Domestic Violence Family Risk Factors
Male dominant family, lower status employment
Young women at risk Economic dependence of woman Isolation Supporting peer attitudes and
behaviors Lower income
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Opportunity Areas Raise awareness about risks of guns
and domestic violence among public and stakeholders
Routinely ask about access to guns in interventions with people at risk of being victim or perpetrator of domestic violence
Improve reporting of risks for licensing and continuous checking
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Opportunity Areas- Domestic Violence and Policing
Police must routinely query presence of firearms on domestic violence calls
Understand options - temporary removal versus revocation
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Problem: Firearms and Youth
Suicide – 50 youth each year in Quebec 1990-1999 (2000 – 16, 2001-20)
Injury and accidental death Family violence – 40% of youth killed
are killed with a firearm Young offenders: taxing, gang
activity, arming for self-protection
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Suicide and youth – risk factors
Predisposition - poor adjustment, impulsivity, mental illness, substance abuse
Social environment – absence of social networks, problems in the family, sexual or physical abuse
Events – death in the family, divorce, failure, stress..
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Understanding Impacts:Rate of Firearm-Related Death Among Children (<15 Years)
Source: Centers for Disease Control: “Rates of Homicides, Suicides and Firearm-related Death Among Children – 26 industrialized countries.” MMWR. Vol. 46 No.5. 1997.
United States Finland
Northern Ireland Israel
Canada BelgiumNorway Austria France
Switzerland New Zealand
Australia Sweden
ItalyDenmark Scotland
England and WalesIrelandSpain
Taiwan Hong Kong Netherlands
SingaporeJapan
Kuwait
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Risk Factors :Youth Violence
Substance Abuse Mental Illness Aggression and anti-social behaviour Family violence Adolescent nature: impulsive,
immature, imitative, desire for power
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Of victims of violence 23% are between 15-24 even though they represent only 11% of the population
There are high rates of victimization Victimization often engenders
violence
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Youth gangs
Firearms play a role in threatening violence and power
Both real and imitation firearms are used
In rural areas youth primarily access firearms which are stolen
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Youth Access to Guns
Home is where majority of gun death and accidents take place
24% of Quebec homes have guns 33% guns not safely stored Long guns:hunters in family Hand guns: illegal or restricted
weapon (ie children of police, military)
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Replicas
Replica firearms are often recovered in crime
Each year more than 50 children under 18 are hospitalized for injuries caused by air guns
They are the principal cause of eye loss among children and young adults
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Trends In Firearm Death Rates (by age and gender)
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Suicide prevention with youth
With suicide prevention, major concerns relate to unintended consequences of education programs
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Opportunity Areas- Youth Raise awareness about risks of guns
and youth among family and stakeholders ie. schools, child protection, social workers
Routinely ask about access to guns in interventions with youth at risk of suicide or victims of violence
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Safe Storage
Safe storage is essential in rural areas Guns must be unloaded They must be rendered inoperable
with a trigger lock or in a container unless there is immediate need for them
Ammunition must be separate
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Transport
Firearms must be transported unloaded and safely stored in the trunk of the vehicle
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Opportunity Areas: General
Improve compliance with safe storage Increase awareness of risks of firearms in
home Motivate preventative action Improve reporting of risks for licensing and
continuous checking
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Implications for Law
Implications: Licensing to address risks Continuous eligibility Criticality of risk assessment
questions, references, spousal notification
Links to community information!!
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ROLE OF COMMUNITY Firearms are a public safety issue Community awareness of problem and
solutions Take Preventative Action - voluntary
removal of firearms; counselling; legal interventions
Understanding of risk factors
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Stakeholders - overview Parents and families: understand the
risks and take appropriate action Health care professionals: know the
signs, provide counseling, intervene Guidance counsellors and teachers:
know the signs, provide counseling, intervene
Police: identify risks, intervene
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Domestic Violence Workers: safety planning, inquiries re the presence of guns
Communities: report potential problems, demand accountability
Broad education: rational for the law, responsibilities
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Increase awareness of risks Improve police, physicians, shelter
worker, educator procedures Information line Training and education Performance measurement and
accountability mechanisms
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Ask a Question, Save a Life
Do you have access to a gun? Does your (suicidal) son\daughter
have access to a gun? Does the person who threatens you
have access to a gun? Does the person who threatens your
mother have access to a gun?
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Best Practices
Policing and Community partnerships: Project Trident, Metropolitan London Police to address high crime area, Boston Gun Project
Aggressive publicity and outreach program in high crime area
Community outreach and partnerships increase information sharing
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Best Practices Batshaw Family Services: screening for
firearms in domestic violence calls and for suicidal youth in their care
Centres de Jeunesse, Services Psycho-sociaux are also looking at adding specific question re:guns and conjugal violence
Générations: Telephone help lines will question clients in crisis re:Firearms
Montreal Children`s Crisis Team- Screening for firearms
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NEXT STEPS Suggestions and evaluation Examples of tools, programs Volunteers to help review tools,
programs Volunteers to promote awareness in
their organizations Volunteers for on-going awareness
and media efforts Training inside your organisation
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Discussion Recommendations for disseminating
information Know the risks and means of preventing
suicide and domestic violence and communicating the message
Concrete measures to encourage your organization to 1) increase awareness 2) change policies and practices
Suggestions???