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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue #62
7 June 2005
COLOMBIAN WOMEN ADVOCATE FOR
PROTECTION OF WOMEN’S RIGHTS IN
DRAFT LAW ON JUSTICE AND PEACE
The
Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1325 on women, peace
and security, 31 October 2000. CLICK
HERE for the full text of the resolution.
To receive the 1325 PeaceWomen E-Newsletter, send an email to 1325news@peacewomen.org
with "subscribe" as the subject heading.
For past issues of the newsletter, CLICK
HERE.
THIS ISSUE OF 1325 PEACEWOMEN E-NEWS FEATURES:
1. Women, Peace and Security News
2. From Beijing +10 to the September Summit:
Millennium +5 Summit Draft Outcome Document Released
3. Feature Contact: Forum
Norway 1325
4. Upcoming Event:
Seminar on “Women in Conflict Prevention and Crisis Management”
5. UNIFEM Update:
Colombian Women Advocate for Protection of Women’s Rights
in Draft Law on Justice and Peace & Other UNIFEM News
6. A Gender and Peacekeeping Update:
UN Security Council Holds First-Ever Public Meeting on Sexual Exploitation
and Abuse & New Resource - Gender, Conflict, and Peacekeeping
7. Feature Resources:
Conference Report: A Conference on Girl
Mothers in Fighting Forces and Their Post-War Reintegration in Southern
and Western Africa; Women & Elections: Guide to Promoting
the Participation of Women in Elections (OSAGI and DPA); Democratic
Republic of the Congo: FDLR Militia Dependents Vulnerable (RI);
From Rhetoric to Reality: Afghan Women on the Agenda for Peace
(Women Waging); and Learning in a War Zone: Education in Northern
Uganda (WCRCW)
8. Listening to Peacewomen Voices from the
Past
9. Women, Peace and Security Calendar
If you would like to fill out the 1325 PeaceWomen
E-News evaluation form in either English or French, please write
to 1325news@peacewomen.org and we will send you the questionnaire
by email.
The PeaceWomen is a project of the Women's International League
for Peace and Freedom. Please visit us at http://www.peacewomen.org.
1.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
DRC:
CONGO MILITIAMEN RAPE 15 IN VILLAGE ATTACK – U.N.
June 6, 2005 - (Reuters) Pro-government militiamen raped 15 women
and girls in an attack on a remote Congolese village last month,
stealing their clothes so they were forced to flee naked, the United
Nations said on Monday.
SUDAN:
A POLICY OF RAPE
June 5, 2005 - (NYT Op-Ed) All countries have rapes, of course.
But here in the refugee shantytowns of Darfur, the horrific stories
that young women whisper are not of random criminality but of a
systematic campaign of rape to terrorize civilians and drive them
from "Arab lands" - a policy of rape.
FRÉCHETTE
TO VISIT KOSOVO AS PART OF TOUR TO ELIMINATE SEXUAL ABUSE IN PEACEKEEPING
June 3, 2005 - (UN News) United Nations Deputy Secretary-General
Louise Fréchette will be travelling to Kosovo, resuming her
visits to peacekeeping missions to reinforce Secretary-General Kofi
Annan’s zero-tolerance policy on sexual exploitation and abuse
for United Nations personnel.
LOVE
AFGHAN STYLE: WOMEN ARE STILL BEING USED AS CURRENCY IN THE MARRIAGE
MARKET
June 2, 2005 - (The Institute for War and Peace Reporting) Zakira
was given away in marriage to stop a blood feud. Her uncle had murdered
a man and, rather than start a round of revenge killings between
the families, 20-year-old Zakira was bestowed on the murdered man's
brother who happened to be three times her age.
WEST
AFRICA: ECOWAS OFFICIAL SLAMS WOMEN’S EXCLUSION FROM HEAD
OF STATE
May 31, 2005 - (The Analyst) The Deputy Executive Secretary of the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Dr. Remi Artificial,
has raised the question of why women were still being excluded from
the much-coveted position of Head of State and government.
FIRST
LADY'S MIDDLE EAST TOUR STIRS MIXED REVIEWS
May 27, 2005 - (WeNews) Laura Bush's Middle East tour, which generated
a mixed response from women's rights activists in the region, ended
earlier this week, one day before female protestors were among those
attacked at a pro-democracy rally in Cairo.
For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
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2.
FROM BEIJING +10 TO THE SEPTEMBER SUMMIT
|
Millennium +5 Summit Draft Outcome Document
Released
On 3 June 2005, the UN General Assembly President, Mr. Jean Ping
(Gabon), released the first public draft of the governmental outcome
document for the Millennium +5 Summit, to be held 14-16 September
2005. The draft outcome document was formulated by the Office of
the General Assembly President, and is based on the Secretary-General’s
report, In Larger Freedom, the reports of the facilitators on the
governmental ‘cluster’ negotiations (April 2005) and
informal governmental consultations. Between 3 and 21 June, national
governments will prepare their responses to the draft outcome document,
and then recommence informal negotiations on the language in the
document.
Women’s organizations, including WILPF, have noted that the
language in the draft outcome document should be strengthened to
reflect and to support action on previously-made governmental commitments
on women’s rights. Toward these ends, women’s organizations
are preparing a language advocacy document urging Member States
to incorporate a gender perspective in the final outcome document.
This language advocacy document will be available shortly and posted
at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/September_Summit/SeptSummitInfo.html.
For the draft outcome document and more information on the Millennium
+5 Summit processes, CLICK
HERE.
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Forum Norway 1325
Forum Norway 1325 was established in 2005 in order to secure the
implementation of the Security Council Resolution 1325 Women, Peace
and War. Several organizations and institutions in Norway participate
in the forum, which was initiated by WILPF (the Norwegian section).
The forum is open for organisations, institutions and persons who
are interested in working for the implementation of the resolution.
Forum Norway 1325 seeks active dialogue with the Department of Foreign
Affairs and advocates for strong and accountable realisation of
the resolution and it’s intentions by the Norwegian Government.
The forum consists of:
The Norwegian section of WILPF – www.ikff.no
The Centre for Gender Equality in Norway – www.likestilling.no
Care, Norway - www.care.no
Norwegian People’s Aid – www.folkehjelp.no
Amnesty International, Norway – www.amnesty.no
FOKUS (Forum for Women and Development) – www.fokuskvinner.no
Contact information:
Likestillingssenteret (Centre for Gender Equality)
at/ Lene Nilsen or Rachel Eapen Paul
Postboks 8049 Dep, 0031 Oslo
Tel: +47 24 05 59 50
Email: lene.nilsen@likestilling.no,
rachel.eapen.paul@likestilling.no
For PeaceWomen’s compilation of NGO and civil society initiatives
on SCR 1325, “1325 in Action,” CLICK
HERE.
For PeaceWomen’s database of organizations worldwide working
on women, peace and security issues, CLICK
HERE.
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Seminar: Women in Conflict Prevention and
Crisis Management
Organized by the Permanent Delegation of Sweden to the OSCE
in co-operation with Folke Bernadotte Academy
20 June 2005, Vienna, Austria
At the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE)
Annual Security Review Conference, held in Vienna in June 2004,
Sweden put forward a proposal to arrange a seminar on women in crisis
management. UNSCR 1325 on Women, Peace and Security will constitute
the basis for this event, which will be held on 20 June in Vienna.
The overall objective of this expert seminar is to promote the implementation
of UNSCR 1325 in the OSCE. There is a clear role for the OSCE in
doing so, as manifested in the 2004 OSCE Action Plan for the Promotion
of Gender Equality.
A further purpose of the seminar is to exchange information about
women’s participation in conflict prevention and crisis management,
to exchange experience and lessons learned from participation in
conflict prevention and international missions, and to discuss and
identify possible actions in order to implement UNSCR 1325 in the
OSCE.
For more information, contact:
Anneli von Wachenfeldt
Folke Bernadotte Academy
SE-872 64 Sandöverken, Sweden
Tel: +46 612 82 303, +46 70 624 43 78
Fax +46 612 820 21
Email: anneli.wachenfeldt@folkebernadotteacademy.se
http://www.folkebernadotteacademy.se
Back to ToP
Colombian Women Advocate for Protection
of Women’s Rights in Draft Law on Justice and Peace
In late March, the Colombian Parliament opened debate on a new Justice
and Peace law, expected to be finalized by the end of June. Colombia’s
two main national women’s networks – Iniciativa
de mujeres por la paz (Women’s Initiative for
Peace) and Red
Nacional de Mujeres (National Women’s Network)
– have been working since last year, supported by UNIFEM,
to ensure that the new law adequately reflects and protects women’s
rights and enshrines justice for sexual and gender based violence
(SGBV).
The women’s networks have developed a series of recommendations,
targeting both the preamble and specific articles. Colombian women
are demanding that the Justice and Peace law meet international
legal standards, such as the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, especially with regard to the protection of women’s
rights. Their recommendations aim to give victims a strong voice
in the call for reparations and the search for truth. The women
are also advocating for clear mechanisms to be put in place so that
victims of violence, including SGBV, can participate in all stages
of truth and justice processes.
Civil society took up the women’s call for attention to SGBV
among its own recommendations following advocacy by the women’s
networks during a public consultation. The women’s networks
also presented their recommendations directly to Parliament in a
public audience.
In April, three of the women’s 16 specific recommendations
were approved for incorporation into the draft law, in articles
39, 42 and 52. These focused on protection of victims and witnesses
in cases of sexual violence, attention to the specific needs of
victims and representation by women’s organizations on the
proposed National Commission for Reparation and Reconciliation.
Last month, the women’s networks began a second round of proposals
and sent an open letter to Parliament on 12 May, hoping to see more
of their recommendations taken up in the last weeks of negotiations
on the draft. These recommendations
are available in Spanish on WomenWarPeace.org, as is the current
version of the draft
law.
More information on the advocacy initiative and the legislative
process can be found on the Iniciativa
de mujeres por la paz website or obtained by contacting
the networks directly: info@mujeresporlapaz.org
or redmujeresbogota@etb.net.co.
For more on Colombian women’s peace-building activities and
the impact of conflict on Colombian women, CLICK
HERE.
OTHER NEWS:
UNIFEM has new translations online:
- Getting
it Right, Doing it Right: Gender and Disarmament, Demobilization
and Reintegration is now available in French
and Arabic
- The 1325
Toolbox is available in Arabic,
French
and Spanish
- The Annotated
version of 1325 is available in Spanish
New UNIFEM Gender and HIV/AIDS Electronic Library
UNIFEM, with support from the Joint United Nations Programme on
HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), has developed a Gender and HIV/AIDS Electronic
Library to provide up-to-date information on the gender dimensions
of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, including on Gender, HIV/AIDS, and Conflict.
Substantive resources are complemented by a unique feature called
the "e-Course Builder" that allows users to create and
edit a tailored electronic course or report in HTML format, drawing
from the materials contained in the CD-Rom. To obtain a copy, write
to: unifem@genderandaids.org
UNIFEM’s Web Portal on Women, Peace and Security:
http://www.womenwarpeace.org/
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6.
A GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
Security Council Holds First-Ever Public
Meeting on Sexual Exploitation and Abuse
31 May 2005
On 31 May 2005, the Security Council, under the Presidency of Denmark,
held its first-ever public meeting devoted exclusively to sexual
exploitation and abuse. The Council heard from Prince Zeid Ra’ad
Zeid Al-Hussein (Jordan), the Secretary-General’s Special
Adviser on Sexual Exploitation and Abuse, and Jean-Marie Guéhenno,
Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations. The Presidential
Statement, issued at the end of the session, was read by Council
President Ellen Margrethe Løj (Denmark).
Featured below are excerpts from the Security Council Presidential
Statement, and presentations by Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein
(Jordan), the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Sexual
Exploitation and Abuse, and Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Under-Secretary-General
for Peacekeeping Operations:
Security Council Presidential Statement (S/PRST/2005/21)
…The Security Council underlines that the provision of an
environment in which sexual exploitation and abuse are not tolerated
is primarily the responsibility of managers and commanders.
…The Security Council urges the Secretary-General and Troop
Contributing Countries to ensure that the recommendations of the
Special Committee, which fall within their respective responsibilities,
are implemented without delay.
The Security Council will consider including relevant provisions
for prevention, monitoring, investigation and reporting of misconduct
cases in its resolutions establishing new mandates or renewing existing
mandates. In this regard, the Security Council calls on the Secretary-General
to include, in his regular reporting of peacekeeping missions, a
summary of the preventive measures taken to implement a zero-tolerance
policy and of the outcome of actions taken against personnel found
culpable of sexual exploitation and abuse.”
For the full Presidential Statement, CLICK
HERE.
For the Security Council's Press Release, "Security Council
Condemns 'In Strongest Terms' All Acts of Sexual Abuse, Exploitation
by UN Peacekeeping Personnel" (SC/8400), CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
Presentation by Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein
(Jordan), the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Sexual
Exploitation and Abuse
…Our growing understanding of SEA led us also to ask the obvious
question: why had we left this and other similar issues unresolved
for so long. It was well known to many in the secretariat in the
early 1960s that ONUC faced difficulties relating to the ill-discipline
of some of its personnel, and ever since UNTAG was mounted in 1989,
a steady stream of similar reports have surfaced in relation to
practically every subsequent mission, and were brought to our notice
by the secretariat, humanitarian non-governmental organizations
and the press.
…And we, the member states, have refrained, Madame President,
from opening up this subject to public discourse over the last sixty
years because of what: because sentiments of pride, mixed in with
a deep sense of embarrassment, have often produced in us only outright
denials. And yet almost all countries that have participated in
UN peacekeeping operations have, at one stage or another, had some
reason to feel deeply ashamed over the activities of some of their
peacekeepers. If all of us are therefore guilty, so to speak, should
it not then be easier for us, each member state, to visit the transgressions
of its own personnel openly, with some measure of honesty and humility?
Surely, we owe this to the victims of our abuse. And, naturally,
if one is to propose such a change, to the manner by which we confront
this problem, then one is obligated also to set a good example.
… In conclusion, Madame President, we will only eliminate
SEA from UN peacekeeping operations, once we have put into effect
most, if not all, the recommendations, contained in the comprehensive
report, over the next two years. However, that will not be possible,
so long as there are colleagues, both in the general membership
as well as in the secretariat, who would have us believe that the
furore regarding SEA is an over-exaggeration, a media-inspired public-relations
issue, and nothing more – one that will surely soon lapse
into the past. In adopting this draft presidential statement, and
the measures contained in it, the Council’s position will
be read as being equally clear: such an opinion is profoundly mistaken.
SEA in peacekeeping operations is a most serious and tragic issue,
especially for the victims, many of whom are young women living
in the most difficult conditions. And SEA carries with it the most
serious consequences for the future of peacekeeping if we were to
prove ourselves incapable of solving this problem. I therefore applaud
you Madame President, and the Council, for taking this decisive
action today, for you have brought us that much closer toward removing
this dreadful stain on the reputation of UN generally, and on UN
peacekeeping in particular.
For the full presentation, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
Presentation by Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Under-Secretary-General
for Peacekeeping Operations
…The various measures that my Department has undertaken over
the past year at Headquarters and in the field have opened our eyes
to the enormity of the task that lies ahead of us. We need deep,
systemic change. I will do my utmost to implement such recommendations
with due haste, as will managers and commanders in peacekeeping
operations.
I commend the resolve that Council members are showing through the
Presidential Statement under consideration today. I also welcome
the reference in the statement to be read out by the President at
the close of this meeting, which refers to the need for specific
provisions to be included in Security Council mandates for peacekeeping
operations to address misconduct by peacekeeping personnel. Indeed,
DPKO hopes to establish a dedicated capacity to address conduct
issues in the form of Personnel Conduct Units at Headquarters and
in the field. These units will be an essential tool for preventing
misconduct, monitoring compliance with UN standards and ensuring
swift follow-up on disciplinary cases. In an organization that aims
towards professional standards, this is no longer a luxury but a
must.
Sexual exploitation and abuse does not occur in a vacuum. These
acts take place where there is a general breakdown in good conduct
and discipline. DPKO is ready to address the problem in a comprehensive
manner.
However, my Department cannot solve this problem alone. We need
to create a culture and environment in peacekeeping operations that
does not permit sexual exploitation and abuse. This requires joint
action by both DPKO and Member States…
For the full presentation, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
NEW RESOURCE: Gender, Conflict, and Peacekeeping
Edited by Dyan Mazurana, Angela Raven-Roberts, and Jane Parpart
(Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.)
February 2005
Peacekeeping has become a major international undertaking throughout
the world, from Africa to the Americas, from Europe to Southeast
Asia. Yet until now, there has been no systematic analysis of the
key role of gender in post-cold war conflicts and of post-conflict
peacekeeping efforts. This groundbreaking volume explores how gender
has become a central factor in shaping current thinking about the
causes and consequences of armed conflict, complex emergencies,
and reconstruction. Drawing on expertise ranging from the highest
levels of international policymaking down to the daily struggle
to implement peacekeeping operations, this work represents the full
span of knowledge and experience about international intervention
in local crises. Presenting a rich array of examples from Angola,
Bosnia Herzegovina, East Timor, El Salvador, the former Yugoslavia,
Guatemala, Haiti, Kosovo, Liberia, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda,
and Serbia, the authors offer important insights for future peacekeeping
and humanitarian missions.
For more information, and to order Gender, Conflict and Peacekeeping,
CLICK HERE.
For more gender and peacekeeping resources, CLICK
HERE.
For PeaceWomen’s Gender and Peacekeeping index,
CLICK
HERE.
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Conference Report: A Conference on Girl
Mothers in Fighting Forces and Their Post-War Reintegration in Southern
and Western Africa
Prepared by Malia Robinson and Susan McKay, June 2005
“A conference on Girl Mothers In Fighting Forces and Their
Post-War Reintegration in Southern and Western Africa was held at
the Foundation’s Bellagio Center, Bellagio, Italy, from April
12th through 18th 2005. The event was supported by a grant from
the Rockefeller Foundation, financial support from the USAID-funded
Community Resilience and Dialogue Project in Uganda, and a grant
from the University of Wyoming. The conference was organized and
facilitated by Susan McKay, Professor of Women’s and International
Studies, University of Wyoming, and Malia Robinson, an independent
consultant of child protection and psychosocial programming. Maria
Gonsalves and Miranda Worthen assisted the organizers during the
conference. A total of 17 invited participants representing program,
policy and research perspectives attended the conference…
The conference was intended to provide an opportunity for those
directly involved with the demobilization and community reintegration
of girl mothers in African conflict situations to explore the existing
research and share their practical experiences, with the “luxury”
of time and space for reflection, discussion, sharing and creating
possibilities—program ideas, policy recommendations, a research
agenda, and a scholarly publication. It was hoped that the conference
would contribute to the improved capacity of Africa-based practitioners
in documentation, analysis and program enhancement.”
For the full conference report, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
Women & Elections: Guide to Promoting the Participation
of Women in Elections
Office of the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement of
Women and the Electoral Assistance Division of the Department of
Political Affairs
June 2005
“The current handbook is intended to provide a quick reference
guide to assist headquarters- and field-based actors from the United
Nations, Governments and civil society working to promote greater
participation of women in electoral processes in post-conflict countries.
The handbook found its inspiration in the issues and findings of
the Expert Group meeting held in Glen Cove, NY, in January 2004,
organized jointly by the Office of the Special Adviser on Gender
Issues and Advancement of Women (OSAGI) and the Electoral Assistance
Division of the Department of Political Affairs (EAD), as well as
in the knowledge and experience accumulated by the United Nations
in assisting countries that emerge from conflict. The handbook was
prepared by OSAGI and EAD in consultation with a network of experts
from within and outside the Organisation.”
For the full handbook (in both html and pdf), CLICK
HERE (A French language version of the handbook will
be available soon).
An annotated bibliography of resources on all aspects of
women and elections can be found at:
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/osagi/conflict/index.htm
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
Democratic Republic of the Congo: FDLR Militia Dependents
Vulnerable
Sarah Martin and Andrea Lari, Refugees International, 31 May 2005
“In the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), a
Rwandan militia group, the FDLR (Forces Democratiques de Liberation
du Rwanda), may finally be ready to lay down their arms and return
in peace to Rwanda. But as the return process begins to be negotiated
and organized, MONUC, the UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC, the
government of Rwanda and other implementing agencies are not paying
adequate attention to the needs of FDLR dependents, leaving at least
40,000 women and children potentially vulnerable.”
For the full policy recommendation, CLICK
HERE.
For more information, contact Sarah Martin and Andrea Lari at: ri@refugeesinternational.org
or 202.828.0110.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
From Rhetoric to Reality: Afghan Women on the Agenda
for Peace
By Masuda Sultan with contributions from Corey Levine and Elizabeth
Powley
Women Waging Peace Policy Commission, February 2005
“This paper examines the effectiveness of the international
community’s commitment to women’s rights. The study
also provides an overview of women’s initiatives and activities
in Afghanistan, and examines the potential contributions of Afghan
women to the struggle for peaceful and democratic change in their
country. It makes the case that women have the potential to foster
religious and political moderation by providing social services
and pioneering human rights education and reforms. Fulfilling that
potential will depend upon the extent to which the international
community encourages and supports it.”
For the full paper, which includes a set of recommendations, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
Learning in a War Zone: Education in Northern Uganda
Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children, February 2005
“In September 2004, staff from the Women’s Commission
for Refugee Women and Children went on a mission to northern Uganda.
One focus of the mission was to look at the education situation
in the north given that the region has been and is currently in
a situation of violent conflict. With 1.6 million people displaced,
learning systems and structures have been altered significantly,
even with the Ugandan government’s pledge of Universal Primary
Education (UPE).
This report is a snapshot of education in two districts, Gulu and
Kitgum, based on interviews with representatives from NGOs, youth
groups, teachers and heads of schools, local government officials,
multinational actors and the children themselves.”
The report is divided into thematic sections, which includes a section
on gender.
For the full report, CLICK
HERE.
For NGO and civil society reports, papers and statements,
UN and government reports, and books, journals and articles on women,
peace and security issues, CLICK
HERE.
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8.
LISTENING TO PEACEWOMEN VOICES FROM THE PAST |
Third Congress, Vienna July 10-17 1921
IV.2 How to Interest the Young
Whereas: Permanent peace in the future depends largely upon the
convictions opposed to war and the capacity for constructive peace
work of the growing generation and
Whereas: Young women could wield enormous power in opposition to
the use of violence as a means of settling social, racial, religious,
or commercial antagonisms;
Whereas: This Women's International Congress for Peace and Freedom
recognizes the valuable contribution in youth, vigour and enthusiastic
work which young women might bring to the peace movement, and wholeheartedly
invited their active and responsible co-operation; therefore be
it resolved that the Executive Committee be urged to make an intensive
and deliberate effort to get in touch with young women in all political
and social groups through our National Sections, in order to exchange
ideas, create a propaganda attractive and convincing to young women
and otherwise to formulate ways and means by which young women may
be inspired to active work for permanent peace and constructive
freedom. We hereby further recommend that each National Section
provide for a similar effort.
Voted.
From: http://www.wilpf.int.ch/statements/1921.htm
For more WILPF history, CLICK
HERE.
For a comprehensive index of WILPF’s resolutions from its
triennial Congresses since 1915, CLICK
HERE.
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9.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Women and Globalization Conference
27 July-3 August 2005, Center for Global Justice, San Miguel
de Allende, Mexico
The Conference on Women and Globalization is being held in San Miguel
de Allende in the high plains of central Mexico. Here where North
meets South, the neoliberal system’s effect are clearly manifested.
Conference participants will explore this reality not only through
discussion of presented papers, activist workshops and artistic
performances, but also by meeting with local women’s groups
struggling to create alternatives, and by making site visits to
observe concrete social conditions. Plenaries: Globalization and
its Effects on Women: Norma Vasallo (University of Havana), Linda
Burnham (Women of Color Resource Network), Pamela Ateka (Community
Focus Group , Kenya ); Transnational Feminism: Mary Margarent Fonow
(University of Arizona), Angeles Lopez (Frente Authentico del Trabajo,
FAT, Leon, Mexico), Martha Zapata Galindo (México); Women's
Activism against Corporate Globalization and for Women's Empowerment:
Graciela Monteagudo (Argentina Autonomista Project), 2 representatives
from Movimiento de Trabajadores sin Tierra MST (Brazil), Soledad
Bordegaray (Movimiento de Trabajadores Desempleados (MTD) La Matanza,
Argentina ); Globalization, the Environment and Women: Sonia Dávila-Poblete
(Mexican environmental activist), Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University),
María Consuelo Sánchez González (Mexico) For
more information visit http://www.globaljusticecenter.org/
or email: conference@globaljusticecenter.org.
Regional* Programme on Human Rights of Women 2005
29 July 2005: Application deadline
10 October - 4 November 2005: Part 1 in Lund, Sweden
15-19 May 2006: Part 2 in Kiev, Ukraine
During the first phase of the programme, held in Lund, Sweden, participants
will be requested to formulate, in writing, an individual plan of
action identifying challenges in implementing international human
rights standards in their home countries with a focus on a particular
issue or area relevant to their respective institution or organisation.
Phase two of the programme will take place in Kiev, Ukraine and
will follow up on the plans of action formulated during phase one.
Phase two is organised in cooperation with the Institute of International
Relations (IIR), at the Kyiv National Taras Shevchenko University.
For the information brochure and the application form, visit the
Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
website at: http://www.rwi.lu.se/news/tempact/osshuwo05.shtml.
*The following countries are invited to apply for the programme:
Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia Herzegovina, Bulgaria,
Croatia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, Macedonia, Moldova,
Romania, Russian Federation, Serbia and Montenegro (including Kosovo),
Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom U.S.
Section 29th Triennial Congress
10-14 August 2005, San Francisco State University, California
The Congress program will focus on the two new national campaigns,
with plenary sessions, discussions, and formal workshops. The campaign
committees have designed some intriguing and challenging topics
and are drawing on their national membership for the most dynamic
and thought-provoking speakers to guide the workshops. The Middle
East campaign will discuss myths and stereotypes, the role of the
U.S. Christian right in the Middle East, transforming “Armageddon,”
and working in coalition on issues relating to the Middle East.
The “Save the Water” campaign will address ways to inspire
our communities to move the water issue into public focus, a newly
developed study curriculum to inform our communities about the issues,
and reversing the trend toward bottled water. In addition, a panel
from these campaigns and the four retiring campaigns will discuss
the connections among these issues. For more information, visit:
http://www.wilpf.org/us-wilpf/congress.htm.
For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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