Safety and Resilience Through Digital Technologies (SaRe-DiGT)

Safety and Resilience Through Digital Technologies: A Participatory Study with Women at the Intersection of Gender-Based Violence and Immigration in Norway (SaRe-DiGT) is a Marie Curie research project on the interconnectedness of digital technologies, gender-based violence, and immigration in Norway.

Published Updated on

Safety and Resilience Through Digital Technologies

In SaRe-DiGT, we are interested in understanding this impact – the impact of accessing and using digital technologies on individuals´ agency and well-being processes.

Kvinne med mørkt hår og grå genser sitter og ser på et digitalt nettbrett. I bakgrunnen ses bakken, som består av mursteiner.

The project started in September 2022 and will continue until September 2024. It aims to contribute to the development of research-based knowledge and solutions to create transformative technology-facilitated strategies to combat violence among immigrant communities in Norway and beyond.

Digital technologies, agency, and well-being

The centrality of digital technologies in people´s lives is constantly increasing. We use the internet and technologies for many things – to work, learn, communicate, find friends and partners, shop, create, or have fun. In a way, offline and online spaces are becoming enmeshed in the everyday realities of our lives. Our experiences are shaped by our ongoing minute-by-minute interactions with digital technologies- they shape how we think, feel, and act. Thus, our interactions with them create an inevitable impact on our agency and well-being.

In SaRe-DiGT, we are interested in understanding this impact – the impact of accessing and using digital technologies on individuals´ agency and well-being processes. We first want to understand potentially beneficial aspects of technology use by looking into the ways in which technologies enable, mediate, and/or reinforce individuals´ agency and well-being. In this exploration, we focus on the safe, effective, creative, and transformative use of digital technologies in producing meaningful positive changes in people´s lives.

Alongside these positive aspects, we also seek answers to how digital inequalities and digital forms of violence (violence and harassment mediated and reinforced by the use of digital technologies) can negatively affect people´s well-being and disrupt their agency processes. We want to explore barriers to accessing and using digital technologies and the consequences of experiencing these barriers.

Digital technologies, gender-based violence, and immigration

SaRe-DiGT particularly focuses on the interconnectedness of digital technologies, gender-based violence, and immigration. We want to explore how immigrant women use digital technologies to seek safety from gender-based violence and ensure their well-being. We are also interested in exploring how existing social inequalities immigrant women experience influence their interaction with digital technologies.

Norwegian context as a digitalized welfare state

Norway has a highly digitalized society. We see an increasing trend for digitalization of public service provision in Norway, aiming for better accessibility, availability, and effectiveness of services and supports.

In SaRe-DiGT, by focusing on the experiences of immigrant women in Norway, we aim to examine immigrant women´s perspectives on and experiences of digital services. We want to understand the challenges or barriers they may encounter in adjusting to these new technologies and how these affect their well-being and agency processes.

one-day seminar may 6th 2024

Event: Gender-based Violence (GBV) and Digital Technologies

This one-day seminar aims to explore the multifaceted and complex interaction between digital technologies and gender-based violence.

poster for the seminar "Gender-based violence and digital technologies".
The one-day seminar focuses on the multifaceted and complex interaction between digital technologies and gender-based violence.

This one-day seminar aims to explore the multifaceted and complex interaction between digital technologies and gender-based violence. The seminar starts with keynote presentations from three renowned researchers in the field, each focusing on different aspects of the GBV-technology relationship.

These include technology-facilitated domestic violence from the perspective of children, digital justice and online disclosure in the context of street harassment, and an intersectional socio-digital inequalities perspective on negative online experiences. The afternoon panel begins with a brief introduction to GBV research and services in Norway. This will be followed by a presentation of the primary research findings of a two-year community-based qualitative research project on the inter connectedness of GBV and digital technologies, exploring the patterns and trajectories of technology use in victim-survivors’ lives for safety and well-being. The panel also includes presentations by service providers who work in various GBV services in Norway, through which they will share their observations, experiences, and insights on the service, legal, and policy implications of digital technologies in the GBV field.

  • 08.45-09.00 - Welcome and coffee
  • 09.00-10.00 - Dr. Molly Dragiewic, Children and Technology-Facilitated Domestic violence
  • 10.15-11.15 - Dr. Biance Fileborn, Achieving Justice for Street Harassment: The Potentials and Limits of Digital Justice
  • 11.15-12.30 - Lunch break
  • 12.30-13.30 - Prof. Ellen Helsper, Intersectional Socio-digital Inequalities and Negative Online Experiences
  • 13.45-16.15 - PANEL: Observations from Research and Practice

Moderator: Prof. Margunn Bjørnholt, Opening: GBV in Norway

Dr. Busra Yalcinoz-Ucan, The Abmiguous Role of Digital Technologies in Women's Stories of Violence and Safety

Silje Vold Løwe, Romerike Crisis Centre, Digital Technologies: Risks, Barriers and Opportunities from a Service Provider Perspective

Dr. Henning Mohaupt, Alternative to Violence, Regulation of Digital Contact to Promote Safety and Protection from Post-separation Abuse

Ine Lea, Stavanger Crisis Centre, The Impact of Digital Technologies on Service Provision

  • 16.15-17.00 - Questions and discussion
THE PROJECT TEAM

Busra Yalcinoz-Ucan

Busra Yalcinoz-Ucan is leading the project as a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Media and Social Sciences, University of Stavanger, Norway.

Portait of Busra Yalcinoz-Ucan
Busra Yalcinoz-Ucan is a Marie Curie postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Media and Social Sciences, University of Stavanger, Norway

She was previously a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Canada. As a part of this research fellowship supported by Mitacs Accelerate, she worked on a community partnership project examining the availability, accessibility, and effectiveness of psychological interventions and support programs in the gender-based violence sector in Canada.

Yalcinoz-Ucan completed her Ph.D. in 2019 at the Department of Clinical Psychology, Bogazici University, Turkey. Her Ph.D. research focused on women’s decision-making and safety-seeking strategies in violent relationships. Utilizing a feminist intersectionality framework, Yalcinoz-Ucan particularly examined the systemic and structural determinants of women’s decisions, actions, and well-being strategies before and after separation from violent relationships.

She is part of the Gender-Based Violence & Migration (GBV-MIG) Canada Research Program, working as a research associate in the project examining violence against women migrants and refugees. She is also an expert panel member of the Canadian Femicide Observatory for Justice and Accountability (CFOJA).

THE PROJECT TEAM

Hande Eslen-Ziya

Hande Eslen-Ziya is the project supervisor

Portrait of Hande Eslen-Ziya
Hande Eslen-Ziya is a Professor in Sociology in the Department of Media and Social Sciences at the University of Stavanger.

She is a Professor in Sociology in the Department of Media and Social Sciences at the University of Stavanger. She holds a PhD in Sociology from Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland and an MA in Social Psychology from Bogazici University, Istanbul Turkey. She also has a Gender Specialisation from Central European University, Budapest Hungary.

In 2015, Eslen-Ziya was awarded Associate Professorship in Sociology by the Turkish Higher Education Council. She has an established interest in gender and social inequalities, transnational organizations and social activism, and is currently working on how right-wing populist ideologies by creating alternative troll-science discourses oppose the scientific facts and gender theory.

THE PROJECT TEAM

Margunn Bjørnholt

Margunn Bjørnholt is the secondary supervisor to the project.

Portrait of Margunn Bjørnholt
Margunn Bjørnholt is a professor at the Faculty of Social Studies, VID Specialized University, Oslo. 

She is a Research Professor at the Norwegian Centre for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies (NKVTS) and a Professor of Sociology at the University of Bergen. She is a professor at the Faculty of Social Studies, VID Specialized University, Oslo. 

Her current research focuses on questions of gender, violence and power, including violence against women migrants and refugees, intimate partner violence and violence in Sámi communities. Other major topics of her research have been changes over time and generations in men’s work–family practices and gender relations, and migration and social change.

Project details
Project name

Safety and Resilience Through Digital Technologies: A Participatory Study with Women at the Intersection of Gender-Based Violence and Immigration in Norway.

Project leader

Busra Yalcinoz-Ucan

Duration

2022-2024