The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore

The Standby Collective is the first communications campaign in Singapore aimed at encouraging bystander intervention against sexual harassment (SH) on the Mass Rapid Transport (MRT). Targeted at public transport commuters (PTCs) aged 18- to 35-years-old, it aims to increase the rate of bystander int...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ho, Xin Er, Chia, Lynn Jing Ying, Tan, Hilary Hsin Ying, Ng, Nowell Xin He
Other Authors: Ferdinand de Bakker
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73666
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-73666
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-736662019-12-10T12:22:16Z The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore Ho, Xin Er Chia, Lynn Jing Ying Tan, Hilary Hsin Ying Ng, Nowell Xin He Ferdinand de Bakker Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Humanities The Standby Collective is the first communications campaign in Singapore aimed at encouraging bystander intervention against sexual harassment (SH) on the Mass Rapid Transport (MRT). Targeted at public transport commuters (PTCs) aged 18- to 35-years-old, it aims to increase the rate of bystander intervention against SH on MRTs. This is achieved through improving PTCs’ confidence in identifying and intervening when witnessing SH. Key research findings show that bystanders fear misidentifying SH situations and are therefore afraid of taking inappropriate intervention. These insights help to shape the overall campaign strategy, which was executed in four phases – Catch, Connect, Convert, and Continue. Framed by the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) and the Bystander Intervention Model (BIM), the campaign allowed PTCs to explore and practise intervention mechanisms in SH through creative avenues. The mixed-media tactics include: (1) Webisodes, (2) Interactive Theatre Workshops, (3) Print Collaterals, and (4) Information Portal. The campaign’s reach and impact were evaluated through post-campaign surveys, focus groups discussions and retention surveys. Campaign exposure resulted in significant improvement in Step 2 and Step 4 of the BIM, as well as the perceived behavioural control cosntruct of the TPB. The campaign also created real social impact as it had encouraged several SH victims to report their case or to seek counselling. Future campaigns can draw lessons from The Standby Collective and adapt strategies to improve bystander intervention behaviour, particularly for sensitive topics like SH. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2018-04-03T02:46:20Z 2018-04-03T02:46:20Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73666 en Nanyang Technological University 254 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Ho, Xin Er
Chia, Lynn Jing Ying
Tan, Hilary Hsin Ying
Ng, Nowell Xin He
The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore
description The Standby Collective is the first communications campaign in Singapore aimed at encouraging bystander intervention against sexual harassment (SH) on the Mass Rapid Transport (MRT). Targeted at public transport commuters (PTCs) aged 18- to 35-years-old, it aims to increase the rate of bystander intervention against SH on MRTs. This is achieved through improving PTCs’ confidence in identifying and intervening when witnessing SH. Key research findings show that bystanders fear misidentifying SH situations and are therefore afraid of taking inappropriate intervention. These insights help to shape the overall campaign strategy, which was executed in four phases – Catch, Connect, Convert, and Continue. Framed by the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) and the Bystander Intervention Model (BIM), the campaign allowed PTCs to explore and practise intervention mechanisms in SH through creative avenues. The mixed-media tactics include: (1) Webisodes, (2) Interactive Theatre Workshops, (3) Print Collaterals, and (4) Information Portal. The campaign’s reach and impact were evaluated through post-campaign surveys, focus groups discussions and retention surveys. Campaign exposure resulted in significant improvement in Step 2 and Step 4 of the BIM, as well as the perceived behavioural control cosntruct of the TPB. The campaign also created real social impact as it had encouraged several SH victims to report their case or to seek counselling. Future campaigns can draw lessons from The Standby Collective and adapt strategies to improve bystander intervention behaviour, particularly for sensitive topics like SH.
author2 Ferdinand de Bakker
author_facet Ferdinand de Bakker
Ho, Xin Er
Chia, Lynn Jing Ying
Tan, Hilary Hsin Ying
Ng, Nowell Xin He
format Final Year Project
author Ho, Xin Er
Chia, Lynn Jing Ying
Tan, Hilary Hsin Ying
Ng, Nowell Xin He
author_sort Ho, Xin Er
title The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore
title_short The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore
title_full The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore
title_fullStr The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed The standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on MRTs in Singapore
title_sort standby collective : a communications campaign to encourage bystander intervention against sexual harassment on mrts in singapore
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73666
_version_ 1681038718206476288