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Please save the Women’s Support Project!

Women's Support Project logoThe Women’s Support Project’s core funding has been affected by local authority  budget cuts, with Glasgow City Council cutting its contribution by 100%. The Project  is seeking alternative funding to continue the service, and is also launching this  funding appeal based on individual giving.

We need to raise £100,000 as quickly as possible to secure the Project for the coming  year and to allow time to identify alternative funding. Can you offer us £20?

If 5000 people say ‘Yes’ to that question, we will reach our target and save the Project.

However donations of any size will be very much appreciated. You can donate or  fundraise on the Women’s Support Project website at http://tinyurl.com/yedkjcz or  send a cheque to 31 Stockwell Street, Glasgow, G1 4RZ. You can also help by  forwarding this information to friends and colleagues, and encouraging people to join  Save the Women’s Support Project on Facebook at http://tinyurl.com/y9qmkwj

The Women’s Support Project was established in 1983 and has provided crucial support to  vulnerable women, as well as providing resources, information, training and public education  on a broad range of ‘violence against women’ issues. The support and information service  has offered a lifeline to thousands of women over the last 27 years, prioritising support for  women whose children have been sexually abused. The loss of this funding threatens to end a  vital and specialised service that offers vulnerable women and their families crisis, ongoing  and long term support, depending on their needs.

The Project is a key player in preventative work against violence against women in Scotland,  offering an annual programme of training workshops and public education events, including  an annual screen debate to raise awareness of child sexual abuse, and a range of seminars on  issues such as domestic abuse and child contact, child protection, and child sexual abuse.

Tireless campaigning against commercial sexual exploitation has been a feature of the  Project’s work, including highlighting prostitution as a form of violence against women and  identifying the need to challenge the demand from men to buy sex as the only effective longterm  solution. The WSP has also contributed to pioneering international prostitution research,  organised hugely successful national conferences on commercial sexual exploitation, and  offered local and national anti-pornography training.

The Women’s Support Project is crucial to the fight against violence against women  and the loss of this key service would be a serious retrograde step for women who have  experienced violence, and for the fight to end violence against women.

You can read an article about the current threat to the WSP in today’s Herald at http://tinyurl.com/ybcl2ms

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