Submitted
Learning for Civic Action Challenge

dotzz

Team Leader
Natasha Johnson
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
Globalizing Gender
What is the name of your solution?
dotzz
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
dotzz is a comprehensive app that allows gender-based violence (GBV) survivors to connect the 'dotzz' to their safety, in their own time.
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

Numbers are sobering.  For these purposes GBV includes, but is not limited to  domestic violence (DV), female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), intimate partner violence (IPV), sexual assault, trafficking, and child marriage.  In the US, 40% of all US femicides are related because of domestic violence and nearly 500,000 women/girls area are impacted by female genital mutilation/cutting. 13.9 % of men and 23.2% of women in the US experience intimate partner violence.  The national average is 8 attempts before someone is able to leave a cycle of violence successfully.   In NY by example, in 2021 alone 600 cases of sex trafficking were reported, 65,000 women/girls are impacted by FGM/C, 1,000,000 domestic incident reports (DIR) were filed, and 4,500,000 acts of sexual assault were identified.  

Globally, these numbers multiply, affirming the pervasiveness of GBV. Worldwide there are 3,904,727,342 women and 1 in 3 of them have experienced DV and 1 in 6 of these women have experience sexual assault. Nearly 200 million women/girls have been impacted by FGM/C and 27.6 million individuals have become victim to sex trafficking. 

Within the anti-GBV sector, basic service delivery can complicate the cycle of violence. Service is transactional, elitist, un-inclusive, heteronormative, antiquated, xenophobic, elitist, biased, and culturally insensitive. Service providers often dictate a prescribed timeline to meet deliverables and the expectation of clients to behave in ways that don't evidence that trauma- a demand many can't regularly meet.  dotzz allows for survivors to start to amass what they need to break the cycle of violence in their own time and when they can assess its' safest for them to take those steps- regardless of what providers recommend, prefer, or anticipate.

Survivors also experience fear, confusion, isolation, and limited resources re: their rights/money/housing. Many also tackle property destruction, parental anxiety, mental/physical health needs, and systems overwhelm navigating pre-existing GBV-response mechanisms. These realities preserve the national average at 8 attempts. dotzz aims to reduce that number by offering a technology that provides real-time solutions that work to close all of the aforementioned gaps.

What is your solution?

dotzz is an app. The dotzz approach was created by someone with 25 years of experience advocating on behalf of GBV survivors and listening to survivors' laments attempting to break the cycle of violence. After download, the dotzz widget becomes incognito on home screens so users can utilize the app covertly if still in the presence of perpetrators.  Using dotzz, beneficiaries receive real-time emergency housing/medical/law enforcement information on a map that may be available to them within a 5 mile radius of their current location.  Users can also share their location safely with trusted friends/family, store photos and identifying documents, create a safety plan and/or a DIR, and receive money through the app.  In addition, users can conduct untraceable text/phone communication that does not appear within the host phone history and record an incident in real-time all with the aid of an attached glossary of GBV industry-standard terms. dotzz is available in 8 languages- English, Yiddish, French, Haitian Creole, Mandarin, Spanish, Arabic and KiSwahili and will ALWAYS be free to users. dotzz will be able to aggregate data about the types of GBV occurring and where these acts occur to better assist service providers prioritizing limited resources and identifying policies that best serve GBV survivors.

Understanding the transient nature of this community seeking safety, if a user loses their phone (which happens often because a perpetrator may take, hide or destroy it), all the material is stored on the dotzz server, so upon receiving a new phone users can receive a new code to re-enter their pre-existing dashboard, in conjunction with their password,  where their materials will remain secure.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

Three communities are immediately benefited via dotzz:  the GBV survivors, GBV-serving institutions, and GBV-policy/research institutions.

a) dotzz assists GBV survivors, including but not limited to those that experience DV, IPV, FGM/C, sexual assault, trafficking and/or child marriage.  For those brave enough to try and break the cycle of violence, many GBV survivors experience an antiquated, confusing, and overwhelming web of services and systems to try and seek safety.  Coupled with mental and physical health factors, language barriers, cultural differences, embarrassment, and credible fear, the uncertainty of the systems involved can sometimes outweigh the certainty of their current environments of violence- resigning them to stay with what they know.

dotzz allows survivors to take the steps to connect the 'dotzz' to their safety discreetly and at a pace set for themselves, by themselves. Offering dotzz in 8 languages and including fillable safety plans, DIRs and a glossary allows GBV survivors to inform themselves of aspects of the system/s unfamiliar to them in a trauma-informed and client-centered way. It allows survivors to start restoring some of the power and control previously eroded, one swipe at a time.

b) GBV-serving institutions, including but not limited to non-profit legal/mental health organizations, mental health organizations, shelters, hospitals, law enforcement, government agencies and airlines. These organizations are the dotzz customer and make the referrals to the GBV survivors.  Currently, many of the aforementioned organizations are overworked and required to respond to high demands with minimal resources.  In turn, much of their service delivery becomes transactional, without having the quality time to practice harm reduction and/or restorative justice approaches that allow them to meet GBV survivors where they are more often.  This approach only enhances GBV survivors reluctance to seek assistance.

dotzz works in partnership with GBV-serving institutions to make their work more transformative than transactional.  Once referred, GBV survivors can communicate with service providers discreetly via dotzz, share their locations if necessary in exigent circumstances and use dotzz to store and gather information/evidence that providers often need to advocate on their behalf administratively and/or legally. In high trauma environments, individuals can often be very forgetful, mis-remember/conflate facts, and misplace documents.  However, using dotzz allows survivors to retain information in real-time, reducing this possibility.

c) GBV-policy/research institutions, including but not limited to government agencies, colleges/universities, think tanks, law enforcement, and policy/research institutes. Policy and systems change is deeply fueled by data, but the covert nature of GBV, its' omnipresence and the speed at which instances occur muddy data, if gathered at all.  Inconclusive data, leads to slow or underdeveloped policy and service delivery strategies- reinforcing the status quo.

dotzz aggregates the real-time, first-person data that users provide by type of experience and location, providing analysts, legislators, and researchers with vital information they haven't had access to previously. dotzz partners with researchers to help inform policy and service delivery utilizing, GBV survivor input, closing the gap that often exists between procedures created and those they directly impact.


How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

Survivors are my fundamental partners in this work. My job clears innovative pathways towards equity that are specifically designed to thrive in my absence and within the communities they are created to serve. Current methods are often non survivor-centered and communities composed of women, youth, immigrants, people of color (POC), and indigent survivors are repeatedly marginalized. As a member to some of those demographics, I know the impact of being on the fringe. All of my efforts work to shift this framework highlighting those at the margin- moving not only who sits at the proverbial table, but where the table actually exists. To that end, I anticipate getting real-time feedback from survivors about dotzz once we commence our 3-6 month pilot at Morrisania Women’s Health Center in the Bronx, NY late 2023.

dotzz is led and created by an African-American, queer-identified, cis-gendered woman that was reared in Flatbush, Brooklyn by Southern transplants from the Gullah Islands and North Carolina, respectively. Observing my parents and neighbors, I benefited from seeing the diversity, generosity, resilience, and vibrancy of its' residents. Their successes, struggles, and responses to the insecurity of poverty, inflation, drug abuse, racism, and crime were tempered by their ingenuity and collaboration. I watched and modeled my parents, and inherently incorporated these characteristics within the anti-GBV interventions l’ve created locally and globally over the past 20 years as a anti-GBV lawyer, professor, activist, artist, wellness practitioner, and entrepreneur.

The lead programmer at dotzz is a White, cis-gendered male reared in the South Pacific.  His commitment to this project has only been fostered by his own experiences as a child seeing his mother battle to break her own cycle of violence, which inherently became a struggle he carried as well.

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Help learners acquire key civic skills and knowledge, including how to assess credibility of information, engage across differences, understand one’s own agency, and engage with issues of power, privilege, and injustice.
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Brooklyn, NY
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
  • United States
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Pilot: An organization testing a product, service, or business model with a small number of users
How many people does your solution currently serve?
20 +
Why are you applying to Solve?

Market Barriers: dotzz is a social enterprise designed to assist those that need it most - for free.  These combination of terms strike a death knell in tech and commercial spaces many times.  At dotzz, we want to be a model normalizing social enterprise ventures as viable monetized schemes that also put doing good on par with standard doing business practices. Guidance on how to centralize the helping of others as a legitimate business practice as opposed to just for optics and/or CSR objectives is central to our goals.

Financial Barriers: 

a) dotzz demands reliable, transparent, and non-discretionary fiscal support to make sure this technology is available 24/7 and at the most critical moments for GBV survivors.  For dotzz to become a safety fixture, its imperative to introduce dotzz to the appropriate grants, awards, angel investors, and venture capitalists that believe in the ideology that profits can be made at the intersection of purpose.  Funding would pay for programmers to work faster and would cure the security, compliance, trademarking, and personnel gaps currently present.  However, without direct fiscal support, connecting dotzz to partners in the following areas informs our desire to participate in Solve.

b) Technical Barriers: dotzz is currently being programmed by one part-time volunteer.  With such a comprehensive piece of technology, dotzz has many moving parts to program, in 8 languages.  The faster the backend programming is completed and available in both Android and Apple capacities, the faster dotzz will be available for download.  Connections to other socially-minded programmers is vital to an expedited dotzz release date.

c) Legal Barriers: prior to going live dotzz will have to endure an independent security review, compliance and trademarking. These very specific needs require connections to professionals that are expert in doing this work and/or to harness the funding to seek them out.  As a safety app, dotzz is required to take every precaution to ensure that the user experience is seamless, secure and reliable- the exact converse to the users' real-life experience. 

Social Barriers: social entrepreneurship is a lonely space and the dotzz final product will only be enhanced by being in community with other Solve team members.  We want to produce the absolute best version of dotzz possible and while we don't have all the answers, techniques, or methods in tow, we hope to gain insight, support and contribution from Solve team members and the greater MIT Solve family.  It's welcomed, and if any of our prior experience can be helpful to others' ventures, we're keen to share it because dotzz was built to fill a void and subsequently, all of our approaches to its' inception are anchored in abundance.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
  • Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
  • Legal or Regulatory Matters
  • Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
  • Product / Service Distribution (e.g. delivery, logistics, expanding client base)
  • Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
  • Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Natasha Johnson
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Natasha Johnson
Natasha Johnson
Mountain-Nudger, Rebellious Lawyer, Collaborative Innovator