

Training & Workshops
We Are Frieda CIC delivers specialist, Black feminist, intersectional, and trauma-informed training designed to transform practice.
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We provide bespoke training programmes, workshops, and seminars tailored to the specific context, risk profile, and structural realities of your organisation. Our facilitation combines research, lived experience insight, and frontline expertise to create learning environments that are rigorous, reflective, and practically grounded.
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Alongside bespoke design, we offer a portfolio of established workshops, including:
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Intersectionality in Practice
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Anti-Racist and Anti-Oppressive Service Delivery
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Introduction to Anti-Racism
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Cultural Competemility and Cultural Literacy
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Intersectional Risk Assessment
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Responding to Racialised Victims and Survivors of Sexual Violence
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Don't Call Me Sis
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Survivor-Led and Trauma-Informed Practice
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Leadership Through a Black Feminist Lens
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Understanding Adultification Bias
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Our sessions equip professionals with the analytical tools, language, and applied skills required to identify systemic harm, disrupt secondary victimisation, and build services that are equitable by design.
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Whether delivered as a standalone workshop, full-day intensive, accredited qualification, or multi-month programme, our training is designed to foster critical thinking, institutional accountability, and sustainable change.

Don't Call Me Sis
Don’t Call Me “Sis” centres the lived realities of Black women and girls navigating violence within systems that often fail to see or protect them. Rooted in Black feminist and intersectional praxis, this training moves beyond awareness to examine how stereotypes, adultification, and racial trauma shape risk, credibility, and access to safety, and what practitioners must do differently.
The Anatomy of Adultification
The Anatomy of Adultification unpacks how racialised stereotypes position Black girls as less vulnerable and more sexually aware, leading to reduced protection and increased criminalisation. Grounded in Black feminist analysis, this training examines how adultification bias operates within education, policing, healthcare, and advocacy practice and what practitioners must do to counter it.