Leveraging Faith Communities to Prevent Violence against Women: Lessons from the Implementation and Delivery of the Motivating Action through Empowerment (MATE) Program
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Program Implementation
2.2. Study Design
2.3. Study Participants
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Implementation
Yeah, oh look, it was a very… it was an eye opener, you know, to get an understanding from the perspective that they [the MATE trainers] were coming from and just getting all the stats, I suppose, of what has been happening out there in the public.(T06)
That was very useful to be able to go OK, how to deal with the different types of people that you’ll come up against, whether it be positive or negative.(T06)
I think the booklet that we went away with was the most useful, practically, to then go and deliver, you know, kind of be able to facilitate something for your community.(T09)
[I]f you do the MATE train-the-trainer course … we don’t get to pick and choose the topics that are delivered to us… you have to look at every single part of that wheel. Whereas when you’re delivering it and you can deliver it how you want, when you want, for whatever, there are some things that just get mixed up, like missed out.(T04)
I think there have been posts and meetings and stuff that could, you know, we could have attended […] but we haven’t been able to access the content of that.(T05)
[O]ne thing I was disappointed with was we had a Facebook page that started up from the training, like for our group […] But there’s really been very little interaction on that.(T07)
So, we do have like the MATE alumni group and stuff. And for me, I’m not entirely sure what the crossover or lack thereof is between [the NFP partner] and the MATE stuff I’m connected with online. I’ve seen it more as like a story sharing space rather than a support space in terms of like, I probably wouldn’t go there and be like, hey, I’m really struggling with this aspect of it all.(T03)
[O]ne thing that was… hadn’t been formulated at that point was the biblical perspectives or, you know, aligning, I guess, of those worlds. And that was definitely something that we were waiting on prior to starting any of our training. Because we knew that the church world, Christians, were going to want to have that perspective in there.(T05)
3.2. Delivery
3.3. Delivery Influences
3.3.1. Capability Influences
I really had no background knowledge on the whole gender side of things and how that influences, you know, the process.(T06)
I was thinking abuse, so I was thinking physical, yeah… and I wasn’t thinking everything else, you know, that we were taught and discussed.(T10)
[Y]ou know, distraction, protocol, intervention or… I can’t remember the fourth one right now.(T05)
[T]he booklet I think was amazing because it had all the topics, you know, and then just detail around how you could facilitate that.(T09)
[M]y concern is around how then do people take what they’ve covered in training, in a two-day period, and do that then well with their communities.(T09)
3.3.2. Opportunity Influences
Well at this stage I would say that we are kind of on the fringe… we haven’t actually got it as being sort of accepted as a formal ministry yet… I think [the church leadership are] supportive of doing the, or the idea of having [MATE] happen. I think they, certainly some of them, feel they’re not sure how it’s gonna fit. And for some of them, they kind of go, well, it’s probably, you know, they have that kind of denial—well, is this something that we actually have in our church?(T02)
You know, like delivering [the gang rape topic] in the church context is just, you know, like that just, that will just blow people’s brains, you know. That’s just not something that most people following a Christian way of life would even encounter.(T07)
[W]e’ve kind of had to be selective in what subjects you kind of choose… I think some content would be more shocking than others.(T05)
[I]t’s been fully supported. We think, yeah, we think it’s awesome…it’s just a timing thing now. Just to, trying to get it into the schedule.(T08)
[W]e realized that we need to start somewhere, and the men are willing to do it, and they’re already meeting once a fortnight anyway, so we’re just going to infiltrate a couple of their nights.(T08)
My biggest problem is I’ve moved into a pretty seriously time draining job at the moment.(T02)
That was the challenge for us, just recognizing that it’s not our, it’s not part of our job description to be teaching it… it’s taking us away from our, from what we actually have to do in our job.(T10)
I think for me, like, if we had a bigger team at church and we had again just more people that were officially on board with it and not just on board, but officially a pilot team on board working towards it, I think that’d be a huge asset moving forward.(T03)
Is it enough just to be in the churches? No, it needs to, we need to develop this so it can be out there in the general community… but it’s then how we get it out into the general public. Because there’s still a lot of people that don’t go to church.(T06)
[I]n a church environment, we’re there because we believe in the gospel… the story of the gospel, it changes us and it and it calls us to be better people and to make a difference in our community and to become more like Christ.(T10)
[W]e were obviously doing this from, you know, as the Gold Coast churches kind of coming into it, so it was it was good to have, like, [the MATE facilitators] that were doing it, that weren’t coming from that church environment, so they were able to, you know, present it, but also for both of our sides, I suppose to be able to come together and be able to understand.(T07)
I think I was fully prepared to [deliver MATE] in a non-Christian environment. I… it fell short for the Christian environment.(T04)
I would say that we, our church, probably has, like a lot of churches, probably majority women, probably at least 55/45 women to men. And yet a lot of the leaders are probably men.(T02)
But there’s been processes that have happened within our church, and I believe it happens in all workplaces, where that inequity comes from. So, and that’s been a little icy to have that conversation because we have ended up with mostly male leaders in our church.(T07)
Well, when they talk about gender roles… they just flat out won’t go outside that. This is what the Bible says a man is and this is what the Bible says a woman is. So, as a result, they wouldn’t include LGBTI community, like because that falls outside the realm of what they believe the Bible says.(T04)
And then sometimes in those environments you’re just not going to go against your leadership. Whether or not it’s a male or female, you know, like there’s just a whole different dynamic there. I guess it’s like going to a course with your boss and then trying to tell the facilitator that your boss is just flat out wrong, it’s just not going to happen. So that dynamic is there.(T04)
[O]ne of the things that I had said when we did our first delivery is we’d like to create a little booklet… [MATE] said, oh, that was a great idea, that was a great idea. Let us work with you. And then, like, I was, like, hey, I’m ready. But yeah, nothing ever, sort of came of that.(T07)
[I] definitely would love to get some more support around, yeah, how we can, some ideas around how we deliver this to, like to youth... rather than, you know, I don’t want to be reinventing the wheel.(T07)
3.3.3. Motivation Influences
[W]hen I think about Christ and who he was, and I read about him, he actually shows some amazing points and amazing behavior that I can model after, try and model from as a male in my community, my family.(T01)
[A]s a follower of Christ I believe that one of the greatest things that he did was that he interacted with people where they are at… And so, from my point of view, that’s kind of where I’m at, is that I need to find ways to connect with people. … I’ve gotta be able to find a way to be able to be in their shoes or understand the space they’re in, or be able to, you know, be comfortable in that space so they don’t think that I’m just there to try and fix them up. But I’m actually there to be, you know, like them and to be supportive.(T02)
I feel like this is something that God has really called me to do.(T07)
I feel like it’s just something that, as the church, we’ve got to step up and really make a change and a difference here.(T07)
They actually made me feel like, empowered me to be like, you can actually make a difference, no matter how small or big.(T01)
Like just, [the train-the-trainer workshop] just sparked the passion that I have like inside of me, even more.(T07)
4. Discussion
4.1. Provide Religious Context
4.2. Accommodate Diversity
4.3. Engage Leadership and Build Leadership Capability
4.4. Employ Social Marketing
4.5. Undertake Co-Design
4.6. Actively Administer, Measure and Monitor
4.7. Limitations and Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Affiliation | Number of Churches | |
---|---|---|
In the Pilot | In This Study | |
Baptist | 1 | 0 |
Church of Christ | 1 | 1 |
Pentecostal | 2 | 0 |
Seventh Day Adventist | 2 | 2 |
Independent or no stated affiliation | 6 | 4 |
Total | 12 | 7 |
Age (Years) | Mean | 43.8 |
Range | 24–57 | |
Gender | Male | 5 (50%) |
Female | 5 (50%) | |
Average Weekly Household Income | Less than $1000 | 2 (20%) |
$1000–$1500 | 1 (10%) | |
$1500–$3000 | 7 (70%) | |
Highest Level of Education | TAFE/qualified trade | 3 (30%) |
Bachelor’s degree | 3 (30%) | |
Post-graduate qualification 1 | 4 (40%) | |
Cultural Heritage | Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander | |
Yes | 0 | |
No | 10 (100%) | |
Cultural background | ||
Australian | 7 (70%) | |
English | 1 (10%) | |
New Zealander | 1 (10%) | |
Scottish | 1 (10%) |
Church | Status | Format | Content | Audience | No. of Trainers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
C01 | Delivered (×2) | Four weekly 2-h sessions delivered over consecutive weeks; standalone | “[We] did the introduction… gender roles… [then] the Duluth wheel and all that sort of stuff on the second week. And then the third week there was a couple of, like, the inequality in sport, jokes and languages, just stuff like that. And then we tied it all up at the end.” | Congregation –general | Three |
C02 | Delivered (×1) | One 3-h session; standalone | Not specified | Congregation –general | Two |
C03 | Delivered (×1) | One 2-h session; at regular church lunch | “We did leadership, in the foundational exercises. We walked through what is domestic violence, bystander intervention. And then we did a group activity as well… it might have been abusive relationships that we did. We walked through the wheel of violence as well… that took us two hours...” | Congregation –general | Two |
C04 | Delivered (×3) | One 3–4 h session; standalone | “Along the lines of the foundational stuff that we did in the first half with, you know, applying some scenarios and then getting into the extracurricular, you know, I think we chose three through to do in the second half.” | Church leadership/staff | Two/three |
Planned | One 3–4 h session; home group bible study | Not specified | Congregation –general | Two | |
C05 | Delivered (×2) | Not specified | Not specified | Church leadership/staff | Two |
Planned | One 1-h session; part of a pre-existing regular youth evening | “[The session] will go through everything from start to finish” | Congregation –youth | Not specified | |
Planned | One 4-h session | “We’ll probably stick with the basics initially, with the youth side of things, to get them to understand what is reality versus what they’re seeing and looking at on social media, and in videos and movies… It will be really about consent, what consent means, the pornography side of things, along with advertising… one or two topics, and then next time a couple more topics” | Church staff | Not specified | |
C06 | Delivered (×1) | One 2-h session; part of a pre-existing men’s group | “We did the introduction bit about what MATE was and what a bystander is all about, that stuff. We also did types–what is domestic violence and types of abuse. We did some brainstorming and some activities around that, and then they had a little break and talked about that a bit. And then they came back, and we did the gender box roles.” | Congregation –men | Two |
C07 | Planned | One 3-h session; standalone | Not specified | Church staff | Two |
COM-B Component | Theme | Influence |
---|---|---|
CAPABILITY | ||
Psychological | Knowledge about violence against women | Understanding nature and drivers of violence against women |
Knowing bystander intervention techniques and their use | ||
MATE program knowledge | Knowing about MATE program structure and delivery | |
Physical | Facilitation skills | Having the skills to facilitate a MATE workshop |
OPPORTUNITY | ||
Physical | Church environment | Having leadership support |
Acknowledgement of violence against women in community | ||
Church not ‘walking the talk’ | ||
Familiarity and/or personal relationships with community | ||
Space in the church calendar | ||
Concerns about the nature of MATE program content | ||
Resourcing and logistics | COVID impacts | |
Trainer time commitment | ||
Human resources to deliver training | ||
Social | Christian context | Bible interpretation |
Church/secular divide | ||
Diversity within church community | ||
Gender and power dynamics | Patriarchal traditions | |
Hierarchies within church | ||
Conservative views | ||
Support and encouragement | Church support | |
NFP partner support | ||
MATE program support | ||
Peer (trainer) support | ||
MOTIVATION | ||
Reflective | Christian identity | |
Responsibility and leadership | ||
Making a difference | ||
Automatic | Passion |
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Share and Cite
Pearce, K.; Borkoles, E.; Rundle-Thiele, S. Leveraging Faith Communities to Prevent Violence against Women: Lessons from the Implementation and Delivery of the Motivating Action through Empowerment (MATE) Program. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 15833. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315833
Pearce K, Borkoles E, Rundle-Thiele S. Leveraging Faith Communities to Prevent Violence against Women: Lessons from the Implementation and Delivery of the Motivating Action through Empowerment (MATE) Program. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(23):15833. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315833
Chicago/Turabian StylePearce, Karen, Erika Borkoles, and Sharyn Rundle-Thiele. 2022. "Leveraging Faith Communities to Prevent Violence against Women: Lessons from the Implementation and Delivery of the Motivating Action through Empowerment (MATE) Program" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 23: 15833. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315833
APA StylePearce, K., Borkoles, E., & Rundle-Thiele, S. (2022). Leveraging Faith Communities to Prevent Violence against Women: Lessons from the Implementation and Delivery of the Motivating Action through Empowerment (MATE) Program. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(23), 15833. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315833