Season 4 Episode 6: “The Professional Part of Me is Not Separated from the Personal:” An interview with Nneka MacGregor
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About this episode
Survivors, who are professionals, can live in fear that if they share their experience in the workplace, they will be dismissed and disregarded. In this episode, Ruth & David speak with Nneka Mcgregor, founder & Executive Director of WomenattheentrE, about the need to transform our systems so that professionals who are survivors can safely share their experience to strengthen the response of systems to gender-based violence.
Nneka shares her journey as a survivor and a professional, including how attempts by those in the domestic violence field to silence her made her even more committed to speaking out. Nneka outlines how survivor knowledge of systems and service failures is vital to making those systems more effective and responsive. Nneka, Ruth & David discuss how survivors are treated as “other,” reflecting cultural attitudes which see survivors as broken and biased. They dive down into the negative impact on professionals and survivors when organizational cultures operate from a place of demeaning, diminishing, controlling, silencing & dictating to survivors.
Nneka shares concrete strategies from her organization, WomenatthecentrE, about creating a professional, survivor-nurturing, successful & supportive advocacy organization. Together, David, Ruth and Nneka explore how professionals and organizations can partner with survivors and the importance of organizational performance markers for supporting survivors inside an agency.
Learn more about WomenatthecentrE
Take our e-course Partnering with Survivors
You may also want to listen to:
Season 4 Episode 2: Coming “Out” As A Survivor In A Professional Setting: A Practitioner’s Journey
Season 3 Episode 7: Understanding And Validating Survivors’ Acts Of Resistance
Now available! Mapping the Perpetrator’s Pattern: A Practitioner’s Tool for Improving Assessment, Intervention, and Outcomes The web-based Perpetrator Pattern Mapping Tool is a virtual practice tool for improving assessment, intervention, and outcomes through a perpetrator pattern-based approach. The tool allows practitioners to apply the Model’s critical concepts and principles to their current caseload in real-time.