Fathers don’t talk to their sons about respectful behaviour
Fathers don’t talk to their sons about respectful behaviour to women
Research
commissioned by White Ribbon New Zealand has found that Kiwi
dads rarely discuss the importance of consent and knowing
when it is OK or not OK to engage in sexual activity with
someone with their teenage sons.
Research
commissioned by White Ribbon New Zealand has found that Kiwi
dads rarely discuss the importance of consent and knowing
when it is OK or not OK to engage in sexual activity with
someone with their teenage sons.
“During interviews with men in 2015 we learnt that fathers were uncomfortable talking to their sons about respectful sexual relationships,” says White Ribbon Researcher Garth Baker. “To find out more we commissioned Research New Zealand to discover what topics fathers were comfortable talking to their sons and daughters about.”
Kiwi dads said they least ‘regularly’ discuss the importance of consent and knowing when it is OK or not OK to engage in sexual activity with someone with their teenage sons. 22% said they regularly discuss this, compared with 66% who regularly discussed ‘doing well at school’.
Compared with other topics, this was the one that fathers were least comfortable discussing.
“These findings are concerning,” says Mr Baker “because our sons want and need to hear this information from their dads (and parents). If dads don’t talk to their sons, they will learn from peers, media and pornography.”
Pornography typically shows aggression against women and it intensifies sexist and violence-supportive attitudes and behaviours, as well as increasing sexually aggressive behaviour. Fathers need to counter this with positive talk about consent and showing respect. Research shows that children are being exposed at younger ages to pornography.
White Ribbon wants to give kiwi dads the confidence and skills to talk about respectful relationships and respectful sexual relationships with their sons. To facilitate this we have created a toolbox for dads and short videos that focus on the top five tips for dads. These can be downloaded at www.whiteribbon.org.nz
The research also found that Dads with a teenage daughter were twice as likely to ‘regularly’ discuss the importance of consent and knowing when it is OK or not OK to engage in sexual activity with someone with their daughter, than their teenage son.
“There is classic double standard with daughters. Dads often want to protect their daughters and therefore have conversations with the aim of keeping them safe. But when it comes to their sons, dads too often think boys will be boys and lack the confidence and skills to have what are vital conversations.
“We can’t expect girls to take all the responsibility for their sexual safety; we need to teach our boys to behave respectfully and legally.
“As men we can influence the attitudes and behaviour of our sons by talking about, and demonstrating respectful relationships. This emphasises the values and behaviours we want instead of violence and sexual violence,” says Mr Baker.
FIVE TOP
ACTIONS FOR FATHERS:
1. Role
model respectful behaviour. Show you respect your
partner as an equal and communicate
respectfully.
2. Be actively involved in raising
your kids. This makes them better people and makes
you a better person too.
3. Start developing
their respectful behaviour early and adjust
to their development.
4. Talk
about respect as a behaviour. Describe what
they can do to show respect.
5. Know they’ll
appreciate learning from you. Kids typically want
more sex education than they
get.
• TOOLBOX https://whiteribbon.org.nz/toolbox/
• IMAGES
for this media release https://whiteribbon.org.nz/media-1/
KEY
STATISTICS
• One in three women will
experience partner violence at some point in their
lives
• Less than 20 percent of abuse cases are
reported
• Approximately 3,500 convictions are recorded
against men each year for assaults on women
• On
average, 14 women a year are killed by their partners or
ex-partners
• Police attend over 100,000 family
violence incidents a year - one every 5
minutes
• Family violence accounts for half of all
reported serious crime
KEY WHITE RIBBON MESSAGES
• Say yes to respectful relationships and no
to violence towards women
• Respectful relationships
require equality, communication and consent
• Violence
is not just physical
• Men are part of the
solution
• You can help fix this problem by taking The
Pledge to stand up, speak out and act to prevent men’s
violence towards women and talking to your
children
ends