Women Models

These models and simulations have been tagged “Women”.

Describes the unintended consequence of Governor Schwarzenegger performing a line item veto to California's Public Health's Domestic violence Program.
Describes the unintended consequence of Governor Schwarzenegger performing a line item veto to California's Public Health's Domestic violence Program.
 The purpose of this model intends to supply a way to organize and apply support for the human rights of all people.    March Status of Women Report   The United Nations status on Women one of the highest authorities internationally describes the violence against women priorities to include the foll

The purpose of this model intends to supply a way to organize and apply support for the human rights of all people.  

March Status of Women Report 
The United Nations status on Women one of the highest authorities internationally describes the violence against women priorities to include the following as a 2nd part of the report.  


The Working Group's first thematic report focuses on Political and Public life.  See the report.


The Working Group's second thematic report to the Human Rights Council in June 2014 will be on women's economic and social life. 

Violence against women as a cross-cutting issue will involve consideration, amongst other things, of violence and sexual harassment in the workplace, in the professions, in educational institutions, in prostitution, or with regard to land or inheritance rights. 

The Working Group will address women's right to equality in public and private, governmental and international institutional frameworks.

It will examine the way against women impacts their capacities in the economic and social spheres and deprives them of equal opportunities. 

The Working Group notes that this is mentioned in the Draft Agreed Conclusions and kindly requests that it be expanded violence emphasized.

Our third thematic theme is family and culture and this will of course include examination of the ways to eliminate discrimination and violence against women and girls in the family, which is often condoned by patriarchal cultural stereotypes. This lies at the core of violence against women, as pointed out in the Draft Agreed Conclusions. Violence against women and girls in the family violates their health and safety and creates a primary barrier to their well-being and equality in all the spheres of their lives.
Indeed private violence is also political, creating an environment of fear in which women live out their lives and constituting an instrument of patriarchal control over women.


The fourth thematic topic focuses on Health and Safety, see report.  

In conclusion, relating to violence as a crosscutting issue means both separate and integrated understanding of the impact of violence against women in all spheres of their lives

We see discrimination and violence against women as interconnected phenomena, stemming from the same epistemological, and mutually reinforcing. The Working Group notes in full agreement with the emphasis in the Draft Agreed Conclusions that the ending of violence against women and girls is not an option but must be a priority for the achievement of sustainable development, peace and security, human rights, economic growth and social cohesion and that the elimination of violence against women and girls must be reflected as a priority area in the post-2015 development framework


 The purpose of this model intends to supply a way to organize and apply support for the human rights of all people.    March Status of Women Report   The United Nations status on Women one of the highest authorities internationally describes the violence against women priorities to include the foll

The purpose of this model intends to supply a way to organize and apply support for the human rights of all people.  

March Status of Women Report 
The United Nations status on Women one of the highest authorities internationally describes the violence against women priorities to include the following as a 2nd part of the report.  

The Working Group's second thematic report to the Human Rights Council in June 2014 will be on women's economic and social life. 

Violence against women as a cross-cutting issue will involve consideration, amongst other things, of violence and sexual harassment in the workplace, in the professions, in educational institutions, in prostitution, or with regard to land or inheritance rights. 

The Working Group will address women's right to equality in public and private, governmental and international institutional frameworks.

It will examine the way against women impacts their capacities in the economic and social spheres and deprives them of equal opportunities. 

The Working Group notes that this is mentioned in the Draft Agreed Conclusions and kindly requests that it be expanded violence emphasized.

Our third thematic theme is family and culture and this will of course include examination of the ways to eliminate discrimination and violence against women and girls in the family, which is often condoned by patriarchal cultural stereotypes. This lies at the core of violence against women, as pointed out in the Draft Agreed Conclusions. Violence against women and girls in the family violates their health and safety and creates a primary barrier to their well-being and equality in all the spheres of their lives.
Indeed private violence is also political, creating an environment of fear in which women live out their lives and constituting an instrument of patriarchal control over women.

In conclusion, relating to violence as a crosscutting issue means both separate and integrated understanding of the impact of violence against women in all spheres of their lives

We see discrimination and violence against women as interconnected phenomena, stemming from the same epistemological, and mutually reinforcing. The Working Group notes in full agreement with the emphasis in the Draft Agreed Conclusions that the ending of violence against women and girls is not an option but must be a priority for the achievement of sustainable development, peace and security, human rights, economic growth and social cohesion and that the elimination of violence against women and girls must be reflected as a priority area in the post-2015 development framework


 Gloria Manzonato    Schema molto semplificato dei casi di femminicidio in Italia  (modificato) Seminario Pensiero sistemico, DSRS, Università di Trento, 2017
Gloria Manzonato 
Schema molto semplificato dei casi di femminicidio in Italia (modificato)
Seminario Pensiero sistemico, DSRS, Università di Trento, 2017
Schema molto semplificato dei casi di femminicidio in Italia
Schema molto semplificato dei casi di femminicidio in Italia
 The model portrays the movement of women in-between train carriages if an additional women-only carriage is added on a train. As after looking at statistics from the Australian Bureau of Statistics and from the Crime and Justice Statistics NSW, a high rate of criminal offences towards women has dev
The model portrays the movement of women in-between train carriages if an additional women-only carriage is added on a train. As after looking at statistics from the Australian Bureau of Statistics and from the Crime and Justice Statistics NSW, a high rate of criminal offences towards women has developed over the years. This particular aims to help illustrate if women would feel safer and would catch the train more often if a women-only train carriage was added.  

Underlying Assumptions:
- Approximately 12,000 women catch the train.
- The initial number of women catching the mix carriage is 0.
- The initial number of women catching the women-only carriage is 0. 
- The initial criminal offence rate is 0.89, meaning that 89% of women between the age of 18 and 50 years old are victim of criminal offence on trains. 
- The initial rate of women who feel unsafe but are not victim of criminal offence is 0.2, meaning 20%. 

Variables:
- Rate of women catching the train as a public transport.
- Rate of women entering carriage: either the mix carriage or the women-only carriage. 
- Rate of risk:  the percentage of women that are at risk catching the train in the mix-carriage. 
- Entering same carriage: the percentage of women re-entering the mix carriage because they felt safe or did not experience any criminal offence towards them.
- Risk of fear: the percentage of women who feel unsafe and are afraid of a criminal offence happening to them. 
- Crime rate: the percentage of criminal offence towards women. 
- Rate of new transport method: the percentage of women catching another transport method than the train due to feeling unsafe in the train or being a victim of criminal offence. 
- Rate of change of carriage in between mix and women-only carriages.
- Rate of safety: the percentage of how safe women feel in the women-only carriage.
- Enter women only carriage: the percentage of women entering the women-only carriage. 
- Rate of trauma: the percentage of women being traumatised and too scared from entering the mix carriage due to criminal offences. 

To note when running the simulation:
-  Compare how many women catch the mix carriage against the women only carriage.
- How many changes to another train carriage due to the different reasons.