Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Women Should Be More Than Window Dressing


Jedi Ramalapa interviews Ingrid Srinath, Secretary General of CIVICUS
InterPress Service
November 24, 2009

JOHANNESBURG, Nov 18 (IPS) - Women in developing countries are among the most vulnerable to the effects of crisis - be that climate change, food price hikes, the HIV/AIDS pandemic or the global recession. It is becoming more commonplace to hear women's testimony, but are women's voices heard when it comes to deciding on solutions?

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Thursday, November 12, 2009

PARAGUAY: Indigenous Women Leaders Buck Discrimination


By Natalia Ruiz Díaz
November 12, 2009
Inter Press Service

More and more indigenous women in Paraguay are overcoming sexist resistance in their communities and emerging as leaders within and outside of their villages, fighting for the rights of their people and against discrimination...

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Monday, November 9, 2009

Breaking Down Abortion Language In Health Bill


by Andrea Seabrook
National Public Radio
November 9, 2009

The health care overhaul passed by the House of Representatives over the weekend was almost scuttled by one issue: abortion.

Anti-abortion Democrats and their leaders tried unsuccessfully to come to agreement about abortion language before debate began.

Instead, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi allowed Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) to offer an amendment on the floor to restrict federal funding for abortion services, even in private health insurance plans. The vote was 240-194.

Anti-abortion groups say this only codifies current law, which already bans federal funding for abortion. "Our amendment does one very simple thing," Stupak said on the floor. "It applies the Hyde amendment — which bars federal funding for abortion except in the case of rape, incest or the life of the mother — to the health care bill."

Abortion rights advocates argued that the Stupak amendment expands the ban well beyond the language in the Hyde amendment, passed in 1976. Colorado Democratic Rep. Diana DeGette, a leader among abortion rights lawmakers, warned that if enacted, "This amendment will be the greatest restriction on a woman's right to choose to pass in our careers."

To get a clearer picture of what the Stupak amendment would do, it helps to take it out of context and just look at the language. Here's what it says:...

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Thursday, November 5, 2009

Girl Power vs. Climate Change


By Taylor Wiles
Mother Jones Magazine
November 2, 2009

The secret weapon in our fight against global warming? Women.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

Coco Chanel: The Orphan Who Transformed Fashion


by Susan Stamberg
Morning Edition
National Public Radio
September 18, 2009

French actress Audrey Tautou plays Chanel in the movie Coco Before Chanel. The designer stood out from the wealthy women around her by donning dark, comfortably tailored men's suits.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

They Can Do It: The Third World's Untapped Power


By Carolyn See
Special to The Washington Post
Friday, September 11, 2009

Book Review: HALF THE SKY
Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide
By Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn

...These Pulitzer Prize-winning authors see the treatment of women in developing countries as the great story of this century, a moral issue, sure, but also as an economic one. What if by oppressing half their population, countries in Africa, Asia and the Middle East have been shooting themselves in their collective foot?...

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Afghan Democracy is Flat-lining--And Only Women Can Save It


Madre
August 18, 2009

...violence against Afghan women undermines real democracy and what Afghan women are doing to create change...

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Friday, August 7, 2009

Onal Found Remorse Among Turkish 'Honor' Killers


Journalist Ayse Onal's coverage of the Turkish men who murdered their sisters and mothers in "honor" killings finds they often feel betrayed by their families. Many killers also want to guide other men away from such crimes. The second of two parts.

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Thursday, July 23, 2009

5 Greenwashed Myths of the Beauty Industry (And How Not to Fall For Them)


by Jasmin Malik Chua, Jersey City, USA on 07.21.09
TreeHugger

With environmental awareness on the ascent, natural and organic beauty products have exploded onto the scene with such force that even drugstore shelves are groaning under their collective weight.

The proverbial fly in the undereye ointment? Greenwashing, which has also seen a corresponding uptick, making it an increasingly difficult task to tease the real McCoys from the bandwagon-hopping pretenders. Although no full-proof decoder ring exists to help us make sense of the murky waters of truth (and falsehood) in advertising, we've pulled together five of the most common ruses making their rounds online and in-stores. Suffice to say, it ain't pretty...

Friday, July 17, 2009

"The Killing of Women is Like Killing a Bird Today in Afghanistan": Afghan Women's Rights Activist


Stephen de Tarczynski, IPS News via Alternet. Posted July 17, 2009.

"The situation is like hell in most of the provinces," says Malalai Joya. "Women haven't gained even the limited rights they had in the 70s and 80s."...

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Saturday, June 20, 2009

End Government Harassment of Pakistani Champion of Women's Rights


Human Rights First
Defender Alert

In 2002, Mukhtar Mai was gang-raped on orders of a traditional village council as punishment for acts allegedly committed by her younger brother. Instead of suffering in silence, Ms. Mai fought back and testified in a rape case against her attackers and is now a leading Pakistani women's rights activist.

For her activism, she has faced constant harassment, including from government officials, who have strongly discouraged her from proceeding with her case. In the latest incident, on June 11, 2009, a power company raided her human rights organization, falsely accusing it of stealing electricity. The company proceeded to disconnect all of the electricity, also affecting hundreds of families in the surrounding area. According to witnesses to the raid, power company officials claimed that a member of the Pakistani government ordered the raid.

This raid is only the most recent incident of harassment against Ms. Mai and has significantly hindered her organization's ability to carry out its important human rights work. Demand that government officials immediately cease these harassing tactics...

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Friday, June 19, 2009

Gender, Race Factors In NOW's Presidential Vote


by Cheryl Corley
National Public Radio
June 19, 2009

...The political argument over age and a generational divide has little swayed Jo Reger, the director of gender and women's studies at Michigan's Oakland University. She says no one should assume that someone younger or older has a specific viewpoint. Plus she says what's interesting about NOW is that it has been able to withstand attacks against feminism and still survive...

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

In 2008 Speech, Dr. Tiller Outlined Views that Underpinned Lifelong Commitment to Reproductive Rights


DemocracyNow!
June 3, 2009

We play an excerpt from a March 2008 speech by Dr. George Tiller before the Feminist Majority Foundation. Discussing his vision for a just and more humane society, Dr. Tiller said, “We’ve given war, pestilence, hate, greed, judgment, ego, self-sufficiency a good try, and it failed. We need a new paradigm that consists of kindness, courtesy, justice, love and respect in all our relationships.”...

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Woman appeals ban on female metro drivers


Moscow ~ Reuters
...In its Friday issue, Izvestia reports that a 2000 law bans women from 456 jobs, including stallion-breeding and oil drilling. Russia was the second country in the world to give women full voting rights after Finland.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Author Susan Galleymore on “Long Time Passing: Mothers Speak About War and Terror”


DemocracyNow!
May 10, 2009

Author Susan Galleymore’s son served in Iraq and Afghanistan. For her latest book, Long Time Passing: Mothers Speak About War and Terror, Galleymore traveled to Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Lebanon, the US, and Israel and the Occupied Territories to interview other mothers about war and its consequences.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Wage Gap Study Arrives in Time for Equal Pay Day


By Dominique Soguel
WeNews correspondent

A state-by-state analysis of male and female earnings provides fresh fodder for today's Equal Pay Day. Among women with college degrees the widest wage gap was in Nevada. The widest wage gap overall was in Wyoming...

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Back to School in Swat, But for How Long?


By Ashfaq Yusufzai
Inter Press Service

MINGORA, Pakistan, Apr 27 (IPS) - Tiny Sheema is happy to be back in school in Swat, a volatile northern district in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP).

Friday, April 17, 2009

Women protesting at 'pro-rape' law attacked by Afghan men


The Independent
Thursday, 16 April 2009

Both groups chanted "Allah Akbar," or God is great. The men called the women "un-Islamic dogs" in a series of abusive chants. Others screamed "death to America". In reply, the women cried: "Afghanistan is a country of lionesses. We want our rights."

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Coffee for Women's Rights



Yes!Magazine
Spring 2009

Today, nearly 1,000 women from 50 communities in Peru and 5,000 women across Latin America are involved with Café Femenino...

Thursday, April 9, 2009

PARAGUAY: Women Growing in Politics - at Pace Set by Men


By Natalia Ruiz Díaz

Meeting of Women Politicians for Democracy and Development

Credit:Natalia Ruiz Díaz/IPS

ASUNCION, Apr 7 (IPS) - The global tendency towards greater participation by women in politics has reached Paraguay, but the pace continues to be set by men, and there are still tough barriers to equal access to elected posts...

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Global Coalition Backs New U.N. Gender Body


Mar 30 (IPS) - An international coalition of over 300 women's organisations and human rights groups, representing more than 50 countries, is lending its support to a proposal aimed at creating a strong new women's body at the United Nations...

Monday, March 30, 2009

Gwen Ifill's Truth


Mother Jones
March 29, 2009

The anchor of neutrality dishes on being polite, a new first for the first lady, and why it's so hard for her to vote.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Iraqi Women's Perspective of U.S. Occupation


In the US, we’ve rarely heard the story of the Iraq War told from the perspective of women. So what are Iraqi women saying on the sixth anniversary of the US invasion? The same thing they’ve been saying since 2003: end the occupation. Polls consistently show that a majority of Iraqis want US troops out.

This week marks six years since the US invaded Iraq. In that time, women have not only faced mounting violence—they have also organized a movement to confront US occupation and violence against women.

The women of Iraq are creating the foundation on which a peaceful and just future will be built. It’s time we started listening to them.

Help us tell President Obama that now is the time for change.


http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/5095/t/4636/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=445

Monday, March 9, 2009

Women lead foreclosure struggles


The racist, sexist subprime mortgage industry and the crisis it created has especially affected women and their families, so it is no surprise that women are active in the forefront of struggles around the country to stop foreclosures and evictions.

Fmr. Irish President Mary Robinson Joins Women Leaders at International Women’s Conference in Liberia


As we mark International Women’s Day, we speak with world-renowned human rights lawyer and advocate, Mary Robinson. She is the former president of Ireland, the first woman ever to hold the office. She is also the former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. Robinson speaks about the international women’s conference hosted in Liberia by President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa’s first female president; being chosen as one of Nelson Mandela’s “Elders”; and the ongoing struggle for women’s rights from Afghanistan to Iraq to Iran.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Black HERstory Month


During the month of February, many activities and events are planned to celebrate the histories or herstories and cultures of people of African descent. How can you participate? Want to put on an event, but fresh out of ideas? Well have no fear! Here are a few suggestions to get you started:

http://feministcampus.blogspot.com/2009/01/black-herstory-month.html

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Love Your Body: Campus and Community Actions


Whether you have 6 minutes or 6 weeks...

You can TAKE ACTION to bring
NOW's Love Your Body Campaign
to your Chapter, Campus Affiliate and Community!

http://loveyourbody.nowfoundation.org/0209kit.html

No Woman, No Culture Immune to Violence Against Women


Below the Belt: A Column by NOW President Kim Gandy

February 20, 2009

Rihanna. Aasiya. Does it take a celebrity assault to get violence against women into the news? What about something as gory as cutting off the woman's head? Indeed the story of one woman's life or death can open up a discussion with people who may not think about the issue at all, or that they can do anything about it...

http://www.now.org/news/note/022009.html

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

No female Senators or Reps on stimulus package conference committee

...This is what it means to not have a critical mass, to have less than 25% of your constituency represented. Only 17% of all congressional members are female. And so, with five from the Senate (5% of the Senate) and 5 from the House (just over 1%), what chance do women get to be selected for these critical reconciliation meetings?

The evidence is out there about the economic impact on women of the recession and women’s organizations have been consulted all along the way. This exclusion of all female congressional members from this final process is absolutely perplexing to say the least...

http://www.writeslikeshetalks.com/2009/02/11/no-female-senators-or-reps-on-stimulus-package-conference-committee/

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Eve Ensler, Kavita Ramdas and Zainab Salbi


Open Letter to President-Elect Obama
Eve Ensler, Kavita Ramdas and Zainab Salbi
Posted January 13, 2009
Huffington Post

On December 5, 2008, a few days before the 60th anniversary of Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a group of global and domestic women's organizations gathered in New York to frame a shared agenda for advancing global women's rights. Determined to use their collective strength and expertise to work together to advance a global agenda for women's freedom, safety and agency, they crafted the following open letter to President-elect Obama and committed to working together to see their vision come true in this century.


Dear President-Elect Obama,

As a group of women leaders who have given our lives to the transformation, protection and empowerment of women in the United States and globally, we want to begin by congratulating you. We are honored and proud to have you lead the nation during this historic time. We also welcome your call to action, reminding us of what we have always known -- that as global citizens we cannot solely rely on any one administration's ability to bring about change, but must be steadfast in pushing forward our own vision and agendas.

We represent a historic movement for change: millions of women across the globe with innovative ideas, influential constituencies and collaborative solutions. We are calling on you to ensure that women are equally represented in everything, from your administration's infrastructure to its decision-making and solution building. We are calling on you to exercise leadership in dismantling the structures that perpetuate gender inequality, impede women's full participation in society and thwart real progress for people around the world.

As war rages in Gaza, it is clear that the time has come to dismantle militarism as the dominant ideology in world politics. We must ensure that women take the lead in building lasting peace in the Middle East, ending genocide in Darfur, stopping femicide in the Democratic Republic of Congo, fighting the War on Terror in Afghanistan, and ending the war in Iraq.

Though the select-few women who hold leadership positions in this country's political system inspire us; women represent more than 50% of the population and deserve more than marginal representation. We believe that in order for your vision of change to succeed, women must be in positions of power. While US women gained the right to vote 100 years ago, to date only 14% of the US Congress are women. This must change.

The major economic, security, governance and environmental challenges of our times cannot be solved without the equal participation of women at all levels of society -- from the home to institutions of national and global governance. Women's voices must be central in all major discussions including the economic crisis, overhauling our education system. Long-term investments in women's education, health and leadership development are equally critical. Economic structures continue to marginalize women. Consider this: women represent two-thirds of the world's labor yet we own less than 1% of the world's assets.

In addition, more than 500,000 women die each year because of inadequate medical and reproductive care. Violence against women is a pandemic that determines women's realities, impeding their access to education and economic self-sufficiency. This global epidemic is undermining the future of the world, as women are at the heart of all communities and families; we literally carry the future in our bodies.

Yet these are not "women's issues." In fact, such investments are vital to economic growth and the well-being of all individuals, communities, societies and nations. Consider India's economic transformation of the past 15 years: The World Bank finds that states with the highest percentage of women in the labor force grew the fastest and had the largest reductions in poverty.

As policy makers, activists, researchers, and grant-makers we have spent our lives investing in women and know that these kinds of investments have immeasurable and fundamental impact for the better. Worldwide, women are uniquely positioned to bring innovative insights and creative solutions to global leadership forums. If we hope to improve existing economic, peace and security, and human development frameworks women must not only be included, but must be at the heart of the discussion.

We are calling on you to be the President who ushers in the time of women. Our vision of the future is one in which women and men are equal partners, standing shoulder to shoulder in confronting the world's challenges. We welcome, with hope and anticipation, your shared commitment to this vision.

We represent more than half of the world's human potential. And our time has come.

Sincerely,

Linda Basch, PhD
President, National Council for Research on Women

Mallika Dutt
Executive Director, Breakthrough: Building Human Rights Culture

Eve Ensler
Founder, V-Day

Adrienne Germain
President, International Women's Health Coalition

Sara Gould
CEO, Ms. Foundation

Christine Grumm
CEO, Women's Funding Network

Geeta Rao Gupta
President, International Center for Research on Women

Carolyn Makinson
Executive Director, Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children

Kavita Ramdas
CEO, Global Fund for Women

Zainab Salbi
President, Women for Women International

Civil Rights
Celebs Talk Politics
Barack Obama

Clinton says she would embrace climate, arms treaties



Clinton says she would embrace climate, arms treaties
Lays out vision to revitalize US leadership

...In five hours of testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, she said she would revive attempts to ratify or renegotiate several international accords, including the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which bans nuclear weapons testing; the Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty, which stops the production of fuel for nuclear weapons; and the START agreement between the United States and Russia, which expires in December. The treaty reduces stockpiles of nuclear weapons and their delivery systems.

In addition, Clinton said during her confirmation hearing that President-elect Barack Obama would appoint a negotiator to international efforts to halt global climate change...

6 Steps to a Greener Baby Nursery



6 Steps to a Greener Baby Nursery

Since Your Little One Will Be Spending a Ton of Time in His(or Her) New Nursery, You'll Want to Take Extra Precautions with What You Stick in There.

By Annie Bell Muzaurieta

...this covers paint, furniture, clothing, toys, cleaning products, etc!