Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (2024)

Global branding agency Bulletproof has joined forces with Amsterdam’s top universities to launch ‘Amsterdame’, a campaign that highlights the increasing gender gap in the Netherlands and demands legislative action towards closing it.

Leveraging the city’s upcoming provincial elections on the 15th March and coinciding with International Women’s Day, Amsterdame will see the entire city plastered with witty slogans and hard-hitting statistics that demonstrate the real impact of ignoring the issue any longer.

A collection of bold graphic posters, banners and custom stickers fuse symbols from gender politics and the city’s history to publicise the campaign’s three demands.

Two are addressed to the government: to implement an Equal Pay for Men and Women Act and to fund research into sex differences to improve healthcare for women. The final demand goes out to all eligible voters in the Netherlands: to vote for women on the 15th March to increase female representation in government.

Bulletproof has designed six graphically striking posters to go live in 125 locations across the city, as well as “wildplak” locations.

The studio has also created street sign stickers that will be placed over the names of the most famous canals - Herengracht (Gentlemen’s Canal), Prinsengracht (Prince’s Canal), and Keizersgracht (Emperor’s Canal) – transforming them into their female counterparts, Damesgracht (Dame’s Canal), Prinsessengracht (Princesses’ Canal) and Keizerinnengracht (Emperesses’ Canal).

To learn more about the campaign, which also includes placards, banners, flyers and stickers that, with the help of university students, we spoke to Jorijn Harms, Client Partner at Bulletproof.

What was the brief?

Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (1)

This was an interesting project for us because there wasn’t a brief! Well, not from a client anyway. Bulletproof Amsterdam was moving offices from Prinsengracht (Princes Canal) to Herengracht (Gentleman’sCanal), and we noticed the dominance of male names in the Amsterdam physical space. With only 12% of city streets named after women, we realised that this is an expression of a much bigger societal structure.

When we dug deeper, we were shocked by the level of gender inequality in The Netherlands; a place that’s generally seen as progressive. The brief we gave ourselves was, ‘how can we use creativity to target the gender gap and promote positive action?’.

How did the initial brainstorming phase go?

Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (2)

We discussed and researched the gender gap in The Netherlands – which has increased between 2008 and 2022. The Netherlands has dropped from 9thon the Global Gender Gap index to 28th– we all agreed that this was a very important issue.

We worked on developing creative ideas to put the issue at the top of people’s agenda – like plastering over the canal street names with their female counterparts. But we also wanted to make a wider impact, to effect real change. That’s why we also created the more ambitious and far-reaching AmsterDAME campaign that will hopefully endure to make a real difference.

We identified three priority issues to focus on – the gender pay gap, the research gap, and the democratic representation gap. From here, we started looking for partners to help us propel awareness and come up with solutions.

We contacted the top universities in Amsterdam,InHolland University of Applied Sciences, University of Amsterdam, Vrije University, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences and Mediacollege Amsterdam,who were equally excited about the concept.

They helped us to amplify the campaign, organising a lecture and panel discussion for International’s Women’s Day (8thof March).The focus for these events was those women in Amsterdam – AmsterDAMES such asMarieke Samallo and Zahra Runderkamp– who are already driving positive change and could share solutions to close the gap.

What was the process behind ideating the concept?

Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (3)

Our campaign was inspired and built from our city. From the name to the iconography, each element was created to evoke a sense of place.Our creative team used iconic Amsterdam elements such as the city flag’s Saint Andrew’s Crosses (or “Andrea’s”!) and drew inspiration from women’s movements of the past, like the Suffragettes.

We wanted to create a fresh look and feel that captured the bold and courageous attitude of the AmsterDAMES we’re highlighting in our campaign, but also conveyed a real sense of positivity and excitement.

We combined these visual elements with a punchy tone of voice and brought the design to life across digital and physical. For example, we played with the names of Amsterdam’s many famous canals, overlaying the male ‘Princes Canal’, among others, with its female alternative, Princesses Canal.

Visual assets include a series of typographicposters, flyers and hoodies, as well as a full website and social media content.Ultimately, we asked ourselves how we could best show the mark that the women of Amsterdam make on our city.

What was the production process like?

Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (4)

As we were running the campaign ourselves it was a lot more hands-on than what we’re used to, but it was great to have full creative control, and amazing to see how excited everyone was by this cause. We managed to pull off so much in a short period of time.From film to print, we had our hands full.

As well as the production of the design elements, we interviewed ten different women and wrote content,created a short film, built a website,an interactive mapand set up a social campaign. It was hard work, but very rewarding.

What was the biggest challenge during production? How did you overcome it?

Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (5)

Time was short and we had a lot of moving parts and different production partners to liaise with. But by working closely together and focusing on the issue we all care so much about, we were able to make so many things happen in a short period of time.

Also, with not having a paying client we had to invest our own time and money into getting the campaign off the ground. We are very lucky that Bulletproof’s founders are extremely supportive and see the power of creativity. They allowed us to not just make this happen but really encouraged us to push this campaign as much as possible.

What kit/tools/software were used to create the project?

oFigma for the interactive map and website

oAdobe photoshop for the halftone AmsterDAME posters and social content

oAdobe Illustrator for stickers, type posters, banners, and flyers

What is one notable thing that happened during production?

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It was so inspiring to see how galvanising a big idea and a shared cause can be, and we didn’t do this completely on our own. The university students helped us to flypost the city, film makers partnered with us to capture the journey, the MediaCollege ran a radio show and our AmsterDAMES got up on stage to promote real action.

All in all, to create a movement you need to embrace help from every angle to make as much noise as possible.

What’s the main message of this project and why does it matter?

Our main message is that it’s inexcusable to still have a gender gap. So many people see equality as a fundamental human right, yet the reality is that even a country with a very progressive image like the Netherlands has a long way to go.

A more inclusive and diverse society is better for everyone, not just for women. Making real progress is totally possible, but we do have to make it happen!AmsterDAME shines a spotlight on Amsterdamers who are creating change and actively closing that gap – through the university partnershipand new collaborationswe aim to create springboard for more and more AmsterDAMES year on year.

How long did it take from inception to delivery?

Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (7)

It took about seven weeks from our concept deck to our campaign hitting the streets. It’s been fast, but we know we want to keep the campaign alive and make it even bigger and more impactful over the coming weeks, months, and years! We won’t stop until the gap is closed.

What do you hope it achieves?

We want the gender gap to be closed in the Netherlands by 2030.

Tags
  • Creativepool Editorial
  • Bulletproof
  • Jorijn Harms
  • behind the idea
  • advertising
  • campaign
  • interview
  • Amsterdame
  • International Women’s Day
  • gender pay gap
Bulletproof targets Dutch gender gap in Amsterdame campaign | #BehindTheIdea (2024)

FAQs

What has the Netherlands done for gender equality? ›

The Netherlands has one of the world's biggest funds for the promotion of equal rights for women and girls, gender equality and sexual and reproductive health and rights: the SDG5 Fund.

What is the SDG 5 in the Netherlands? ›

The goal of SDG 5 is to achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls. This dashboard contains the indicators corresponding to SDG 5 according to the global framework of the United Nations. Where possible, the framework is filled with data about the Netherlands.

What are the equal rights in the Netherlands? ›

This includes a ban on discrimination (the first article of the Netherlands), the freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom of assembly and the right to privacy. These are limitations on government, which citizens can enforce these classical civil rights directly at the judge.

What is Amsterdam equality? ›

Amsterdam's human rights agenda

Human rights form the basis of Amsterdam's diversity policy. This means that the city's many residents must all be free to be themselves and to make their own choices. Crucial to this is the concept of mutual responsibility, based on the principle of 'equal rights, equal opportunities'.

Which country has the best gender equality? ›

1) Denmark

Nordic countries usually come out on top for measures related to gender equality, and the GII is no exception. Denmark has the best GII score based on the most recent data (2021), at 0.013.

What country has the biggest problem with gender equality? ›

Madagascar is one of the worst countries for gender equality, as 40.3% of women aged 20-24 were married before the age of 18. Women and girls aged above 10 spend 14.6% of their time on unpaid domestic work, whereas men only spend 2.8%. The current adolescent birth rate for women aged 15-19 is 150.8 per 1,000 women.

What is Amsterdam doing to be sustainable? ›

We are therefore choosing to create gas-free neighbourhoods, eco-friendlier ways of generating electricity and heating, drastic energy savings and zero-emission traffic. We will prevent waste and the loss of resources by creating closed circuits as much as possible.

What are the main targets of SDG 5? ›

SDG 5 is focused on pursuing the main goal of real and sustained gender equality in all aspects of women and girls' lives which includes (1) ending gender disparities, (2) eliminating violence against women and girls' lives, (3) eliminating early and forced marriage, (4) securing equal participation and opportunities ...

What are the sustainable issues in the Netherlands? ›

Environmental policies focus on problems of climate change, acidification, eutrophication, dispersion of toxic substances, disposal of waste, disturbance, water depletion, squandering of resources and nature protection.

Are the Netherlands feminist? ›

In the Netherlands, feminism began as part of the first-wave feminism movement during the 19th century. Later, the struggles of second-wave feminism in the Netherlands mirrored developments in the women's rights movement in other Western countries.

Which country belongs to Dutch? ›

Dutch is used as the adjective for the Netherlands, as well as the demonym. The origins of the word go back to Proto-Germanic *þiudiskaz, Latinised into Theodiscus, meaning "popular" or "of the people", akin to Old Dutch Dietsch or Old English þeodisc, meaning "(of) the common (Germanic) people".

Is there inequality in the Netherlands? ›

Inequalities in net wealth holdings are relatively large. This is to a large extent a debt-driven phenomenon and related to the large number of Dutch households with low and sometimes negative net housing equity.

Why is Amsterdam called Sin city? ›

Sin city is not only Amsterdam. There is an immense number of cities involved in such activities collectively that they gain a tag of sin city to them. Amsterdam is a place where the red light district being famous around the globe for its prostitutional activities in it.

What does the 3x mean in Amsterdam? ›

The three Xs (XXX) are actually the three Saint Andrew's crosses. St. Andrew was a fisherman who was martyred on an X-shaped cross in the 1st century AD, which is relevant to Amsterdam as the city's symbol dates back to 1505 when it was a fishing town and all ships registered in Amsterdam flew this flag.

What is the male to female ratio in Amsterdam? ›

In 2023, a slight majority of the population of Amsterdam was female, with a population of 463,800, compared with 454,300 men.

What is the Netherlands ranked in gender equality? ›

For the 3rd consecutive year, the Netherlands is ranked 28th in the Global Gender Gap Index, continuing to lag behind neighboring countries. This is revealed in the Global Gender Gap Report 2024 by the World Economic Forum (WEF), published on Wednesday, 12 June.

What has the Netherlands done for the world? ›

The Netherlands and its people have made numerous contributions to the world's civilization in art, science, technology and engineering, economics and finance, cartography and geography, exploration and navigation, law and jurisprudence, thought and philosophy, medicine and agriculture.

What are the gender roles in the Netherlands? ›

Within the household, it is usually the man who has the principal authority. However, gender is becoming a less important factor in determining a person's role or duty in the family. Women often have equal rights and the opportunity to choose their form of contribution to the household dynamic.

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