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RESOLUTION 1325 UNITED
NATIONS WOMEN, WAR &
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In general, an anniversary is a cause for celebration – and there have certainly been some solid steps taken towards the full and effective implementation of Resolution 1325 since its unanimous adoption nearly six years ago to celebrate. 1325 must not become something that Member States and the UN system only pay attention to during the month of October. It is vital that we move beyond “Anniversary Advocacy” and that the resolution is mainstreamed within the day-to-day work of the Security Council and throughout the UN system. During last year’s Open Debate on women, peace and security, Austria said “the Peace-building Commission offers the international community a major opportunity to ensure that a gender perspective becomes a normal part of any peace-building process.” Whether 1325 has, in fact, been taken seriously in the design, mandate and work of the PBC to date is the subject which is carefully considered in the soon to be released report of the NGOWG on Women, Peace and Security (see Events Calendar in Item 3). We hope to offer a point of reflection for women, peace and security advocates and for Member States in considering whether the commitments expressed in the past have been realized (see item 4). Member States will again have an opportunity to address this issue during the 2006 Open Debate on women, peace and security. The Debate, to be held on 26 October under the Presidency of the Permanent Mission of Japan to the UN, will focus on the role of women in the consolidation of peace. The NGOWG on Women, Peace and Security (of which WILPF is a founding member) have made recommendations to Member States (see item 9) in regard to several issues – including the integration of 1325 in the work of the Peacebuilding Commission. This month’s UNIFEM Update (item 9) offers particularly valuable messages for the Open Debate which, if taken seriously, would advance the effective implementation of 1325. We hope to see a large number of Member States participating in this debate and, further, that they will seriously consider and address these issues and recommendations. The Open Debate is one of several events to be held in the coming weeks. A number of women from conflict-affected countries will be traveling to New York to participate in advocacy activities and we look forward, in the next issue of the 1325 E-News, to reflecting their valuable perspectives, insight and recommendations for the meaningful implementation of 1325 at the country level. The next edition of our newsletter will feature a review of the events that took place and resources that were released to mark the 6th Anniversary of Resolution 1325. It will also provide more in-depth analysis of the upcoming Security Council Open Debate and the Secretary-General’s latest report on women, peace and security (see item 6). We look forward to receiving information and feedback on events and initiatives, particularly those that took place in places other than New York. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • As always we welcome your contributions
to the newsletter’s content. The newsletter is sent out at
the end of each month. Contributions for the November edition should
be sent to enewssubmissions@peacewomen.org
by Thursday 9 November 2006. ANNAN
CALLS FOR MORE POLITICAL WILL TO COMBAT SCOURGE OF VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN SOUTHERN
AFRICA: WOMEN ACTIVISTS STRUGGLE AGAINST PATRIARCHY CHAVEZ'S
EMBRACE OF IRAN LEADER INSULTS WOMEN LATIN
AMERICA: WOMEN LAWMAKERS FIND STRENGTH IN UNITY AFGHAN
WOMEN'S OFFICIAL SHOT DEAD MUSLIM
WOMEN PROTEST CHANGE TO LUKIC INDICTMENT WOMEN
RETURN TO FIGHT A NEW WAR UN
REPORTS SHARP RISE IN VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, GIRLS IN DARFUR • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY MONTH October 31 marks the 6th Anniversary of the adoption of Security Council Resolution 1325. Below we offer a sampling of events and initiatives planned for the Women, Peace and Security October Advocacy Program. NGO WORKING GROUP ON WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY – OCTOBER ADVOCACY PROGRAM The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security (NGOWG) will be conducting a week of advocacy at UN Headquarters and has invited two women peacebuilders to take part in its Women Peacebuilders Program. The objective of the program is to ensure that women’s experiences and concerns in areas affected by violent conflict are heard by policy-makers and others at the United Nations. The participants selected for the program are actively working on Resolution 1325 and related women, peace and security issues on the local, national and regional levels. The women are developing concrete recommendations on issues of women, peace and security for the work of the Security Council, UN Agencies, Member States and civil society. These recommendations will be communicated at a variety of events, panels and meetings planned for this period. Participant Profiles Ms. Barbara Bangura – Sierra Leone Barbara Bangura, one of the founding members and the Regional Adviser of the Women in Peacebuilding Network (WIPNET) in Sierra Leone, is currently the National Coordinator of Grassroots Empowerment for Self Reliance (GEMS), a women’s organization formed in Sierra Leone in 1998. GEMS mission is to transform the dignity and respect of marginalized women in society to ensure self reliance through development, by working with grassroots rural women towards achieving a well developed society where men and women work together constructively as partners in development. Ms. Bangura has advocated tirelessly for women’s inclusion and participation in the processes of peacebuilding. In 2001, she was the Secretary-General for the Network on Collaborative Peacebuilding in Sierra Leone (NCP-SL), in 2003 she was the Country Coordinator for the Women in Peacebuilding Network in Sierra Leone (WIPNET-SL) and from 2004 – 2006 she served as a Regional Adviser for Women in Peacebuilding Network in Accra, Ghana. Ms. Bangura is actively involved in peacebuilding and non-violence sensitization and training workshops for women. She is a member of several peacebuilding networks, including the Women’s Committee on the Truth & Reconciliation Commission (WACOTREC). Ms. Bangura has taken part in many trainings and workshops focusing around women and peacebuilding, including a workshop on “Gender & Peacekeeping In The West African Context” organized by the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC) in collaboration with The Conflict Research Unit (CRU) of the Research Department of the Netherlands Institute of International Relations ‘Clingendael and the first Regional Conference of Women in Peacebuilding Network in Dakar, Senegal. Ms. Safaa Elagib Adam – Sudan Ms. Elagib Adam is currently the Secretary-General and Gender Advisor of the Community Development Association (CDA), which she joined in 1992. The Community Development Association is based in Khartoum, Sudan. The Community Development Association (CDA) is a non-governmental organization working on sustainable development and peace – with a special focus on the western states of Sudan. Ms. Elagib Adam has worked extensively in the area of gender and peacebuilding, including as a National Expert for German Development Services and with OXFAM UK as a Deputy Relief Coordinator. Her professional training and experience includes participation at many peacebuilding consultations and dialogues including: The Civil Society Forum of the Donors Conference and Gender Symposium for Sudan (Oslo, 2005); Expert Group Meeting on Understanding the Darfur Conflict (Addis, Ababa); and a workshop on Women’s Human Rights and Gender-Based Violence (UNHCR, Geneva, 2004). In 2005, Ms. Elagib Adam participated as a Gender Expert in the 7th round of Darfur Peace Negotiation in Abuja. She was also among the 1000 women nominated in 2005 for the Nobel Peace Prize by the project Peacewomen across the Globe. In addition, Ms. Elagib Adam is an executive member of the Darfur Forum for Dialogue and Peaceful Co-Existence, as well as the Sudanese Women Empowerment in Peace and Development Network, and a member of the Darfur Conflict Advocacy Group. Ms. Sharon Bhagwan Rolls - Fiji Ms. Bhagwan Rolls is the Coordinator of femLINKpacific. Ms. Rolls is a leading advocate of women, peace and security. She has presented numerous papers and conducted training on a range of issues including women’s media advocacy, and the implementation of UN commitments to women, peace and security, especially through UN Security Council resolution 1325, and has undertaken women’s media assignments in Bougainville, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste to address women’s under-reported contributions to peace in these conflict areas of the Pacific region. She is presently the AMARC-Women’s International focal point for the Pacific region, as well as the Vice President of AMARC Asia Pacific Board. AMARC is the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters. She has served on the Reference Group of the AUSAID Pacific Media Communications Facility, is the Pacific region’s coordinator for the (WACC) Global Media Monitoring Project and is also a member of the Gender Caucus (Steering Committee) for the World Summit on the Information Society. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • UNIFEM SCR 1325 ACTIVITIES Given the theme of this year’s Security Council open debate, UNIFEM activities and events will focus on our work in post-conflict governance, gender justice and security sector reform. The Executive Director of UNIFEM, Noeleen Heyzer, will address the Security Council noting that while it is essential to ensure that women are present in sufficient numbers in peace negotiations and in public decision-making institutions, physical presence is not the same thing as influence. We must work not only to bring more women into representative politics, but also to reform governance systems to build public accountability for meeting women’s needs. UNIFEM will also support the participation of three civil society women peacebuilders from Timor-Leste, Liberia and Burundi at the open debate as well as at the SC Arria Formula meeting. In addition, UNIFEM with Member States and civil society partners will organize five panel discussions highlighting the linkages between the SCR 1325 and the newly established Peacebuilding Commission and the importance of gender justice and security sector reforms in peace consolidation (For a full listing please see the calendar of events). In preparation for the open debate UNIFEM has prepared in number of resources: CEDAW and SCR 1325: a Quick Guide, Voice, Influence Justice, Security: the Keys to Inclusive and Sustainable Peacebuilding; Gender and Conflict Analysis: Towards Context-Sensitive Conflict monitoring and peacebuilding; and a CD of major UNIFEM publications on governance, peace and security. Extracts from UNIFEM’s key advocacy messages for the open debate are included in the UNIFEM update in item 9 below. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1325 OCTOBER CALENDAR For further details and who to contact
about these events please: For the Calendar developed by The Office of the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women visit: http://www.un.org/womenwatch Wednesday 18 October, 2006 Institute for Peace and Justice Women
Peacemakers Conference. Who's making policy? What difference does
it make? Co-Convened by Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice (IPJ) and UNIFEM Monday 23 October, 2006 Gender & Disarmament Hosted by Global Action to Prevent War (GAPW) and Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • National Level Implementation of Security
Council Resolution 1325. Turning Rights on Paper into Justice on
the Ground: Enforcing SC Resolution 1325 as Binding International
Law Hosted by the Global Justice Center. Tuesday 24 October, 2006 Women, Peace and Security: What progress
since UN Security Council Resolution 1325? Wednesday 25 October, 2006 Women, Peace And Posts - Representation
Of Women In The United Nations System Hosted by OSAGI and DPKO • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Beyond Victimhood: Women’s Peacebuilding
in Times of Conflict Hosted by the Permanent Mission of Denmark/UNIFEM/International Crisis Group and others. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Launch of ‘Six Years On’ Report:
The Peacebuilding Commission & Resolution 1325 Hosted by the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Beyond Victimhood: Women’s Peacebuilding
in Times of Conflict Hosted by NYU, ICG, Inclusive Security, UNIFEM and others. Thursday 26 October, 2006 Open Debate of the Security Council on
Women, Peace and Security Under the Presidency of the Permanent Mission of Japan. Friday 27 October, 2006 Townhall Meeting & Breakfast With
Women Peacebuilders Hosted by the NGO Working Group and UNIFEM
2005 Open Debate Statements and the Peacebuilding Commission Gender mainstreaming and women’s participation in relation to the newly established Peacebuilding Commission (PBC) was address by several Member States, at last year’s open debate on women, peace and security. Amongst those who addressed the Council, there appeared to be strong support for this body partnering with civil society, and in particular women’s organizations, in the fulfillment of its mandate. The resolution establishing the PBC Resolution (A/60/180) [e]ncourages the Commission to consult with civil society, non-governmental organizations, including women’s organizations. Support of the PBC as a vehicle for ensuring women’s participation was reflected in most statements, including the Presidential Statement. Disappointingly, however, only a few states acknowledged the importance of a formal mechanism for consultation within the mandate of the Commission. Both Norway and Austria expressed support for the appointment of a Gender Advisor in the Peacebuilding Support Office - this has not yet been taken up and is something that the NGOWG is again recommending this year. It is hoped that these statements will facilitate further debate on the commitment to, and pace of, real implementation of Resolution 1325 – in particular through mainstreaming the resolution in the work of the UN system. • • • •
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• • • • • Canada (for Human Security
Network) Denmark France Germany Namibia (for SADC) Norway Peru Philippines South Africa Tanzania United Kingdom (on behalf
of EU) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For the full 2005 PeaceWomen
Open Debate Thematic Compilation please visit:
Statement by South Korean Women
on North Korean Nuclear Test We oppose the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s (DPRK) nuclear testing and we encourage a peaceful and reasonable solution to this issue. The DPRK has finally conducted its first nuclear bomb test on October 9, 2006. It shocked the world by conducting the test on the Korean peninsula. We remember tens of thousand Korean victims of atomic bombing in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan in 1945. The DPRK’s actions deny the illegal nature of nuclear weapons and breach the 1992 South-North joint declaration on the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula. It also threatens peace on the peninsula and may lead to the expansion of arms and nuclear proliferation throughout Northeast Asia. It has also undermined the hope of Korean women who have worked hard to peacefully reunite Korea. We women once again clarify our position opposing to any form of nuclear testing and weapons that defy peace and threaten human lives. The DPRK’s nuclear weapons program must be abandoned. The DPRK’s testing was expected. They had announced that it would take hardline measures on the US financial sanctions against the DPRK to secure their livelihood and sovereignty, demanding bilateral dialogues with the United States. The United States ignored the DPRK's demand and kept sanctions in place. As a result, the DPRK has finally carried out their threat, conducting the test. The current situation is due to a lack of active measures to build mutual trust between the United States and the DPRK. Another concern is the international community's move toward raising tension. We women cannot agree with the United Nation Security Council and Korea's neighboring countries on placing economic and military sanctions against the DPRK. Raising tensions by using blockades and other means of political pressure will only lead the DPRK to take another hard-line stance. Sanctions will not resolve this issue. They will instead lead to more tension and instability on the Korean peninsula and heighten the danger of war, making our hope of peace unattainable. With the current situation, more reasonable and peaceful measures are needed to resolve the issue of the DPRK's nuclear testing. This issue must be resolved through dialogues and negotiations. The United States, especially, needs to start dialogue with the DPRK immediately. Despite the Six Party Joint Declaration of September 19 last year, the United States imposed financial sanctions against the DPRK which led to the current testing. This issue can be resolved through a package deal with the United States guaranteeing the security of the regime in the DPRK and by it abandoning its nuclear weapons program. Those countries involved in six-party talks must support the building of mutual trust between the United States and the DPRK. Thus, rather than force, the DPRK’s issue can be resolved in a diplomatic manner by enticing the DPRK to participate in six-party dialogues. The Republic of Korea government should be more independent and assertive when it comes to the DPRK. Modifying the engagement policy toward the DPRK and reviewing the Mt. Kumgang tourism project and Gaesung Industrial Complex matter would further heighten tension. Rather than joining sanctions against the DPRK, we women demand the Korean government to strive to minimize tension and concentrate on diplomatic efforts to achieve long-term goals of settling peace and achieving reunification of the Korean peninsula. In difficult times, the reconciliation and cooperation policy and South-North exchanges should be continued for peaceful dialogues. We women will join hands with people and other organizations both non-governmental and governmental in the ROK and abroad who seek to resolve the DPRK's nuclear issue in a peaceful manner and to realize a nuclear-free Korean peninsula. We will strive until the day peace is achieved. October 10, 2006 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • WILPF also issued a statement, available here: http://www.wilpf.int.ch/statements/dprk_nuke_test.html • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For more women, peace and security initiatives – in country, regional, global and international, visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/global/index.html 2006 Report
of the Secretary-General on Women, Peace and Security This report on women, peace and security, released by the Secretary-General on 9 October 2006, is a response to the statement by the President of the Security Council, on behalf of the Council, at last year’s Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security to “update, monitor and review the implementation and integration on an annual basis of the System-wide Action Plan and report to the Council.” For the full report please visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/1325/N0653084.pdf Peacekeeping Watch: news & resources ANNAN
FURTHER ENHANCES ‘ZERO TOLERANCE’ OF SEXUAL ABUSE
BY UN PEACEKEEPERS Ensuring the Accountability Of United
Nations Staff And Experts On Mission With Respect To Criminal
Acts Committed In Peacekeeping Operations (A/60/980) Website of the UN Department of Peacekeeping
Operations (DPKO) on Gender and UN peacekeeping For more links to websites focused on
Gender and peacekeeping, including those of the Gender Units
in a number of UN peacekeeping missions, please visit • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For PeaceWomen’s Peacekeeping Watch index, visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pkwatch.html For more gender and peacekeeping news, visit
PeaceWomen’s Gender and Peacekeeping News Index:
Open Letter
to UN Ambassadors: Recommendations on the Security Council Open
Debate on Women, Peace and Security Dear Ambassador, To advance the implementation of Security Council resolution 1325 on women, peace and security in the year to come, the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security (NGOWG) respectfully submits the following recommendations and urges you to consider them in your statement at the Security Council Open Debate on Women’s Participation in the Consolidation of Peace on 26 October 2006. 1. While the NGOWG commends the Security Council for efforts undertaken over the past year to implement SCR 1325 in its work – including consultations with representatives of Sudanese women’s groups during the Security Council Mission to Sudan in June 2006 – the overall implementation of SCR 1325 by the Security Council remains low, and its use within the work of the Council remains infrequent. Noting that, to date, the Security Council has no systematic way to ensure the integration of a gender perspective in its work, we urge you to:
2. While welcoming the recent meetings of the UN Peacebuilding Commission (PBC) in support of peacebuilding processes in Burundi and Sierra Leone, we note the need to ensure that the PBC integrates core commitments to gender equality and women’s participation in its work, as required by SCR 1325. We urge you to:
Preceding this year’s open debate, the NGOWG will release a report on the implementation of SCR 1325 in the Peacebuilding Commission, which we hope will provide further insights and proposals on these issues. 3. Noting continued pervasive sexual and gender-based violence against women and girls by parties to armed conflict, most recently documented by the Secretary-General in his In-Depth Study on All Forms of Violence Against Women (A/61/122/Add), we urge you to:
4. Noting that women and women’s organizations continue to be largely absent from most peace negotiation processes around the world, in spite SCR 1325’s call for the involvement of women in the creation and implementation of peace agreements, we urge you to:
5. With support of the United Nations, governments and regional organizations should develop action plans on women, peace and security using the framework of SCR 1325. The action plans should:
However, to date, there is no clear place where governments or regional organizations can go to share best practices in or to view model action plans on SCR 1325 or take stock of how governments and regional organizations have progressed in implementing SCR 1325 at the national or local levels. We urge you to:
We are confident that the aforementioned recommendations will do much to ensure accelerated implementation of resolution 1325. Should you wish to discuss this matter with us, please do not hesitate to contact our office at the address given above. Thank you for your consideration and your concern regarding this issue. Sincerely yours, Gina Torry, Coordinator Signed: Members of the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security: Boston Consortium on Gender, Security and Human
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• • • • • • • Security Council Open Debate on
Women Peace and Security Key Messages: Voice, Influence, Justice, Security, Accountability I. Women’s voice in peace-building
and peace consolidation must be amplified Although there are many differences between women, they often come together over the following concerns: justice and reparations for war-time atrocities against women, property rights and economic supports in order to rebuild livelihoods, protection and restitution of property for returnees, and participation in public decision-making forums. In Burundi, Sudan, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Timor Leste, and Afghanistan, national conventions and dialogues have given women leverage subsequently to assert rights to participate in constitutional reform and in electoral competitions. In effect, this contributes to consolidating a constituency in support of gender equality in post-conflict recovery. The Peace Building Commission should seek to engage women’s organizations at the country level so that they are able to voice their knowledge and perspectives, suggest creative strategies most conducive to the local context, and fully invest their networks and communities in the processes of peace and development. II. Enabling women to influence peace-building
processes requires institutional transformation UNIFEM works not only to bring more women into representative politics, but also to reform governance systems to build public accountability for meeting women’s needs. Gender-sensitive governance reform entails: • Scrutiny of public expenditure management
from a gender perspective to ensure that resources are allocated
in ways that reflect national commitments to build gender equality.
Gender-responsive budgeting procedures can assist in this. The PBC and the Peacebuilding Support Office should address gender equality issues when the PBC considers issues of security sector reform, transitional justice and reconciliation, and land reform and economic infrastructure in the process of developing a country strategy for peace consolidation. III. Women need justice -- judicial reform
beyond the transitional phase must address women’s needs Sexual violence is not, however, the only reason for which women have immediate needs for justice in a post-conflict context. Women’s basic economic security requires that the justice system defend women’s access to and control of productive assets, particularly land. Rapid rebuilding of women’s’ livelihood base is not only a critical prerequisite for recovery from conflict, but it also protects women from vulnerability to sexual violence and exploitation and HIV/AIDS. The cost and complexity of rule of law reform and justice system rehabilitation has often driven donors and states to prioritize rebuilding the commercial law sector to support economic recovery. This in effect relegates women’s justice-seeking to the customary or informal sector, where they must petition traditional or religious tribunals. These informal justice institutions do not always uphold international human rights standards, particularly in relation to women’s rights. This can prevent women from taking leadership roles in community governance and economic recovery, which can be to the detriment of long-term sustainable peace. IV. Women need safety – bring gender
equality into security sector reform Gender-sensitive security sector reform entails: V. The international security establishment
should be accountable for gender equality, starting with accountability
mechanisms for SCR 1325 At the SC level: a mechanism to ensure the systematic integration and implementation of resolution 1325 in the UNSC’s work is needed. Such a mechanism could include designation of a SC member to serve as a focal point on women, peace and security. Alternatively a SC working group on women peace and security could be created, consisting of representatives from all UNSC members. At the UN System Level: the UN system-wide action plan on the implementation of the SCR 1325 needs to be strengthened through regular monitoring with measurable indicators and benchmarks; independent information systems to ensure an objective review of the entity’s performance; performance measures and incentive systems that support implementation of 1325; and periodic reviews. At the National Level: At the national level SCR1325 implementation has been ad-hoc. Only few member states have developed national action plans or strategies on SCR 1325. The 2005 SC Presidential Statement called on Member States “to continue to implement resolution 1325 (2005), including through the development of national action plans or other national level strategies.” Such action plans and strategies need to be developed in consultation with civil society organizations and include monitoring and reporting mechanisms. • • • • •
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• • • • Call for Papers: Forgotten
Conflicts Workshop at Colgate This workshop will address the issue of "forgotten conflicts" like that in Western Sahara. It will bring together approximately 15 scholars from around the globe in order to address the epistemological, historical, ethical, and political implications of this phenomenon. The 2-day workshop will privilege thorough and substantive interaction, with the aim of facilitating engaged and critical responses to the topic. To this end, papers will be submitted in advance of the workshop and posted on a firewalled web site for participants to read before the event. Please email abstracts of 250 words to all three
of the organizers by 10 November 2006: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Gender in the Construction
of the Democratic Developmental State Participants in the CODESRIA 2006 Gender Symposium will be invited to engage the renewed debate on the developmental state in Africa whether built on its democratic underpinnings or its social/institutional embedness with a a view to squarely engendering its theoretical underpinnings and weaving gender concerns into the fabric of its proposed operational policies. For more information, please visit:http://www.codesria.org/news.htm • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • WiSER: The Inaugural International
Women and Leadership Conference The Women and Leadership Conference is one of the few international conferences that focuses on women and leadership and has the express aim of bringing together researchers and practitioners. This link between researcher and practitioner leads to new insights into the issues facing women and provides a range of opportunities for future collaborative work. It will provide a unique opportunity within Perth for local, interstate and international scholars and practitioners within the fields of leadership, management, organisational change, gender studies, social policy, business and education to present both refereed and non-refereed papers and benefit from the networking opportunities that will arise from a meeting of their peers.
To download the registration form, please visit: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Women's Voices Illuminating
Cultures in Conflict For more information, please visit: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • For the complete calendar, CLICK HERE. The
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