Skip to main content

Cookie settings

We use cookies to ensure the basic functionalities of the website and to enhance your online experience. You can configure and accept the use of the cookies, and modify your consent options, at any time.

Essential

Preferences

Analytics and statistics

Marketing

Across the West Midlands, young changemakers are turning lived experience into policy action. - 💬 Explore their proposals and track their impact here

After: Continuity, memory, and future access

After a formal process or phase, time becomes a question of what endures, who maintains digital spaces and platforms, and who can access it safely. La Nuestra aims to be “an open, living archive” of testimonies of sexual violence, creating collective memory while resisting the logics of mainstream platforms that monetise or algorithmically exploit such content. The project plans to anonymise testimonies, categorise them, and host them in a feminist, non‑commercial infrastructure so that women can continue to share, search, and connect over time without depending on volatile corporate platforms.

This shows how safer temporal design extends beyond the moment of speaking: it includes retention and deletion policies, long‑term governance, and clear responsibilities for maintenance, security, and updates. The “after” is not only about reporting back; it is about ensuring that archives, relationships, and infrastructures remain aligned with the original commitments and do not become sources of renewed harm through neglect, exposure, or drift.

image

Confirm

Please log in

The password is too short.