
How Advocates Are Adapting Violence Prevention Programs That Win
Every program is built for a context. But contexts change and when they do, the communities we serve can’t wait for us to start from scratch.
Anti-rights forces are counting on our movements being too rigid to respond. But advocates across Latin America, Africa, Southeast Asia, and beyond are proving them wrong, taking what works, rooting it in local reality, and building prevention programs that don’t just survive pressure. They advance because of it.
That’s why we’re sharing the hard-won lessons from Adaptation Journeys, a living collection of real-world insights from activists, practitioners, funders, and communities navigating the messy, powerful, necessary work of making violence prevention programs fit new realities.
1. Invest before the headlines
Local providers are already saving lives. Fund them before crisis hits, not after.
2. Trust is the program
Adaptation without relationship-building fails. Invest in trust between originators, implementers, and communities. It’s not soft work, it’s the work.
3. Guard the core
Some elements made the program succeed. Don’t let pressure quietly erode them. What’s valued in theory must be protected in practice.
4. Communities lead. Full stop
When funders or outside organizations drive adaptation decisions, programs lose power. Center the people closest to the ground.
5. Name the power dynamics
Unacknowledged power imbalances distort the work. Name them. It’s not a threat to collaboration, it’s what makes collaboration real.
6. Safety is never optional
Gender-based violence rises during crisis. Survivor-centered safety isn’t an add-on. It’s the foundation.
About this Resource
Adaptation Journeys is a collective of activists, practitioners, researchers, and funders from over 10 countries across Latin America, North America, Africa, Europe, and Southeast Asia. Together, they’re advancing knowledge and practice for adapting violence against women (VAW) prevention programs through shared learning, respect for lived experiences, and community building.
They see adaptation as a collaborative practice, strengthened when people learn across roles, contexts, and experiences.
Take Action
Share this playbook with every practitioner, funder, and advocate in your network.
Adaptation is how we win, and it starts with each of us.









