NEWS

Post date: Fri, 01/27/2023 - 06:22

by Jan Cordeman, Lib Hutchby, and Nancy Price
Earth Democracy Committee

February 2023

WILPFers in Iowa and North Carolina are showing us how to “accelerate change” on the local level, working with allies toward a moratorium on factory farms and exposing the environmental racism of CAFOs.

For decades, small diversified farms have sustainably used animal waste for crop fertilizer, but today’s excessively large CAFOs (Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations) that are responsible for housing beef or dairy cattle, hogs, and chicken for meat and eggs, produce massive amounts of waste.

In Iowa, the largest pork producer in the US, Jan Cordeman works with the Iowa Alliance for Responsible Agriculture. A coalition of 25 organizations, including WILPF US and her Des Moines Branch, is working toward a moratorium on factory farms; and the Factory Farming Awareness Coalition is also working to build the movement to end factory farming. You may watch the recent People’s Hearing on Factory Farms in Iowa here.

In North Carolina, Lib Hutchby of the Triangle Branch works with the North Carolina Environmental Justice Network on the air, water, and health problems caused by CAFOs. Jamie Berger in "How Black North Carolinians Pay the Price for the World's Cheap Bacon" explains the environmental racism of the CAFOs that have a stranglehold on the state legislature. Industrial pork production exploded in eastern North Carolina in the late 1980s and early ‘90s, as mega CAFOs that each housed thousands of animals displaced small farms, lured there by pro-business tax incentives, lax environmental regulations, minimal oversight, and with little pushback from community residents.

Ever since then, the Black, Latinx, and Indigenous residents who live near the giant pig farms have been fighting for their rights to clean air, for clean water not poisoned wells, for better health care rather than shortened lifespans and higher rates of physical and mental health problems, and for a life free of the stench of the 10 billion gallons of waste the state’s 8.8 million pigs produce each year. This low lying region with sandy soil and shallow aquifers is vulnerable to flooding and now has the top 10 ranked counties for number of pigs per land area in the entire US.

How CAFOs Foul and Pollute Our Waterways

Here’s the “Scoop on the Poop”! When manure is too frequently applied to large areas of land, nutrients overwhelm the absorptive capacity of the soil, and either run off into surface water or are leached into the groundwater. Groundwater contaminated with pathogens, antibiotics in animal feeds, and chemicals is a serious threat to drinking water, and can move eventually to pollute rivers and streams.

Equally devastating, the clay or concrete storage pits, lagoons, or holding ponds can break or overflow from rainwater, severe storms, and hurricanes and pollute drinking water sources.

This all relates to the aims and goals of World Water Day. Accelerating Change toward achieving Goal 6 – clean water and sanitation – could apply to CAFOs, but only at this time by passing individual state or a national moratorium. Watch the Iowa CAFO Moratorium 2023 Talk here.

 

 

Post date: Fri, 01/27/2023 - 06:04

In Ghana, a WILPF member directs her attention forward.

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

February 2023

Here we are, in a new year, but still here we see the global and national problems that both preceded and grew in extent in 2022. Looming ahead is the 2024 election year. So what is WILPF going to do?

What we’re doing is building bridges between generations and into the future! Thanks to generous bequests in 2021, we have the ability to build capacity now. We rely on our members to use that capacity for issue actions, branch building, and community collaboration. You can join your energies to national and local WILPF to help with this bridge-building!

When Hopson, Bishop, Guignon, Weiss, Traylor Birnie, and Yingling designated inheritances for WILPF, they were investing in and caring for a world they could not live to see. They’re counting on us to use their money wisely. As the Board considers WILPF’s 2023 budget, I believe we can all appreciate the opportunity they’ve given us – and our responsibility to discern how and when to take action with those funds.

WILPF in 2023 is an organization with many members over age 65. The COVID pandemic has profoundly restricted our organizing as well as affected us all individually. We are called upon to be resilient and flexible – including in finding new ways to build bridges and reach out to others. Currently our WILPF communications model relies primarily on media that younger people scarcely use:

  • emails
  • websites
  • phone calls
  • magazines

WILPF offers political actions, skills trainings, issue presentations, and helpful discussions – but how do we get the word out?

One part of our bridge-building is designing WILPF ways to work with multi-faceted communications. In addition to all of the above media, we’ll look at connecting with our members and the public through texts and what I call anti-social media – including by supplementing eNews articles with videos on YouTube and TikTok.

As our outgoing Treasurer, Jan Corderman, said in her January report to the Board, "the Bequests we received in 2021 give us opportunities." She also noted the following, in reference to WILPF’s 2022 and 2023 budgets:

We’ve invested bequest income to effectively handle important fundraising work with new Staff positions.  We’ve increased the allowance for Issue Committees.... It is likely that we’ll have other recommendations to consider for action at the January 31 [Board] meeting.

Yes – I anticipate that the Board will be discussing a number of carefully considered staff expenditures in our 2023 budget. As I envision it, in 2023 we’ll buy some additional instruments, put new strings on our violins, and wax our bows; we’ll select the right sheet music, tune up, and do some rehearsing. We want to be ready for 2024 – to make harmonious and powerful music, so that we can dance together through that very important election year!

Let’s start on the branch level for 2023, my Year of the Branch. After three years of pandemic, the Board will look at how to assist branches with diverse local membership, issue, and outreach activities. I expect we’ll fund a new organizer position to work with branches, along with one or more paid interns. Also, branches will likely have access to new micro-grants to help fund local initiatives. Would you like to strengthen your branch through an oral history project? If there’s enough interest, we might also help fund such efforts.

We’ll want to build on the development plans initiated in 2022, including expanding last year’s development social media work into new platforms. And in other WILPF work areas, we want folks to hear about WILPF! To keep publicizing our program work and organizational presence we’re looking to continue the budgeted 2022 social media and communications funding. We may also increase coordination and communications initiatives – including working together with allied groups. We’re working smart as well as hard!

Our budget is a chart of our priorities for 2023. You can contact me at President@wilpfus.org with comments, or email any of the Board members. (Find Board contact information here.) To request our brochure on how to leave a legacy, email info@wilpfUS.org .

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Fri, 01/27/2023 - 05:58

Picture of our Brigade with six members of Las Dioses Co-op (works closely with La Fondacion Entre Mujeres (FEM), or Foundation between Women). I’m in the back row, third from right.

by Dianne Blais
WILPF US Secretary
Convener, Jane Addams Branch

February 2023

I was one of 22 women who traveled in Nicaragua from January 7-16, 2023, to investigate the conditions and the lives of Nicaraguan women. Several leaders in our group had spent many years in Nicaragua and were emphatic about the improvements made by the Sandinista socialist government.

The trip was organized by the Jubilee House CommunityCasa Benjamin Linder and Alliance for Global Justice.

The delegation heard from women at co-cops, numerous health care centers, parliament, a police station, a maternity waiting home, historical sites, and museums. We heard of women’s efforts to surmount abuse, of their community involvement, and of their resilience.

The Sandinista government prioritizes human rights to water, housing, education, health, safety, and food. We heard much about the construction of a highway unifying people of the Pacific and Caribbean coasts, electricity in almost all homes, and the expansion of fiber optic cable to remote areas.

Terrific strides have been made in education and gender equity in Nicaragua. Half of candidates for elected office must be women.

We learned about US involvement in Nicaragua and were encouraged to ask our government to respect their country’s sovereignty. As we approach the 200th Anniversary of the Monroe Doctrine, the delegation unanimously supports lifting sanctions imposed on the Nicaraguan people and government.

For more info, contact me at DianneBlais@aol.com or call me at 703-830-1998.

 

Post date: Fri, 01/27/2023 - 05:53

 

By Ashley Carrington and Marybeth Gardam
One WILPF Call Team

February 2023

Our One WILPF Calls for 2023 are now quarterly.  Our format is shifting a bit, and we’re asking for your feedback in a short survey.

Starting with our January 12th call, we’ve shifted to a quarterly pattern for these calls. Since we began the calls back in 2016, WILPF has become a much more digitally engaged organization. Now each of our national Issue Committees has events and meetings through Zoom, and they offer many more opportunities for organizing across the country. One WILPF Calls are still a great opportunity to do Solidarity Action planning and hear about topics of broader interest to our membership. But capacity limits and calendar conflicts necessitate less frequently scheduled calls/Zooms.

Our format for the calls, starting in March, will shift so that we begin with announcements at the front end of the Zoom, for half an hour, and welcome guests at the half-hour mark. This hopefully will allow attendees more time to linger longer during the Q&A with speakers if they wish.

“We’ve tried to respond to members’ requests to keep the calls to 90 minutes. And we’ve been doing a good job with that,” notes facilitator Marybeth Gardam. “But if we move the speakers to the second part of the call, and members want to linger longer, those who need to drop off after 90 minutes are free to do that. It’s a format we’re testing out in March.”

We’re also asking members to weigh in with your feedback on One WILPF Calls. Here’s a very short survey that’s easy to fill out and will give us a window into member preferences during the next couple of years. The last time we did a One WILPF Call Survey was about three years ago. Now’s a good time to share your thoughts.      

2023 Call Schedule for the Rest of the Year

The 2023 call schedule is as follows – always the 2nd Thursday of the month at 7 pm Eastern / 6 pm Central / 4 pm Pacific:

Thursday, January 12

Our January 12th call featured the topic Women. Life. Freedom: Voices from the Iranian Protests, with speaker Sally Rahima. The call recording is posted on our One WILPF Call webpage, along with the TEXTPAD and CHAT, and also on our WILPF US youtube channel.

It was a great call. Sally’s energy and passion to support her Iranian sisters in envisioning a brave future for themselves and their children was palpable. There were also important Announcements from our Issue Committees of events and actions called for in the next few weeks and months.

Thursday, March 9

The March call, scheduled for Thursday, March 9, is being planned around the topic of International Women’s Day. Speakers are being proposed now to broadly fit within that topic.  Note that there are resources on the WILPF Website to help branches and members mark International Women’s Day. And a social media post about our March 9th call will be posted on the WILPF Facebook page in plenty of time for members to share it widely and help promote the March  One WILPF Call.

Thursday, June 8

Topic TBD

Thursday, October 12

Topic TBD

  

Post date: Fri, 01/27/2023 - 05:47

Members of the North-West Green Party of Philadelphia with the Divest Philly from the War Machine Banner standing at the Federal Courthouse on January 22.

by Tina Shelton
Member, Greater Philadelphia Branch

February 2023

Greater Philadelphia Branch continues its anti-racism work through a bimonthly Roundtable Discussion on Unpacking White Privilege. With rotating facilitators, we discuss the impact that racism has on us personally and how we see the little and big effects in our daily lives. We take advantage of the many resources online, and through that lens, find thought leaders that are new to us. Onward!

We also stand with the peace groups of Philadelphia to say “No to Nukes” and to end all wars. On January 22, WILPF members joined Brandywine Peace Community in uplifting the second anniversary of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons coming into effect. Standing in the eaves of the Federal Courthouse in Philadelphia, activists held signs, remembered activists Kay Camp and others, and tolled the bell for the 68 nation states that have ratified the treaty. The gathering ended with a march around the Liberty Bell.

Members also continue to push for divestment through the Divest Philly from the War Machine campaign.

For more information, contact Tina Shelton: tinades@verizon.net.

 

Post date: Tue, 01/24/2023 - 07:40

February 2023

Feb. 7 Facebook Training for Experienced Participants

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

WILPF counts on our members to help with the social media (SM) posts needed for WILPF outreach and publicity, and Facebook is, currently, the SM platform most widely used by WILPFers.

On Tuesday, February 7, we’ll be offering this special Facebook Training for WILPF SM posters (for 1 1/2 hours) at 7:30 pm EST/6:30 CST/5:30 MST/4:30 pm PST.

Please note: This training is for a limited number of people, and only for those who are experienced posters to Facebook. We will not be providing any introductory or basic FB training. As a prerequisite for this training, participants should have a good general understanding of how to do FB posts. (If you don’t qualify for this training but would like to be more involved with WILPF SM, please email me:   President@wilpfUS.org)

We’ll focus on special strategies to use in FB to magnify our messaging. Register in advance for this Zoom Facebook Training. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with information about joining the meeting.  

Additionally, I’d really like to know who is coming, so please let me know if you’re planning to attend; email me at President@wilpfUS.org. That attendance info will be helpful for those planning the training, as well.

Feb. 13 Galentine’s Day Zoom Party

Have you heard of Galentine’s Day? Members of the WILPF SMART Facebook Group are invited to a WILPF Galentine’s Day Zoom Party on this day just before Valentine’s Day that is set aside for gals to celebrate their friendships with their women friends. On the evening of Monday, February 13, SMART members will spend an hour connecting with WILPF sisters across the country to grab some social media spotlight – and possibly contributions – for WILPF.

If you’re on Facebook and would like to join our WILPF SMART FB Group, find out more by contacting Ellen at et[at]prop1.org. If you’re already a SMART member, you can get your invitation by contacting Jeneve at wilpfus.jenevebrooks[at]gmail.com.

Post date: Tue, 01/03/2023 - 14:13

 

You can help share the facts through supporting resolutions, so that people in the U.S. know the truth about Cuba.

Help pass resolutions in your community. Initially designed for city councils, resolutions are also applicable to organizations — unions, churches, others — to show what is in fact true:  Large numbers of people oppose the current U.S. policy of attacking Cuba. Many people wish to normalize relations.

With your help, we can build overwhelming public opinion — so that unfair and damaging policies against Cuba are no longer politically expedient!

Biden has refused to reverse Trump’s action

As Trump was leaving office, his administration placed Cuba on the U.S. “List of State Sponsors of Terrorism”. That action is in addition to the over 60-year U.S. blockade of Cuba. Even more than the blockade, the “terrorism” listing creates additional difficulties for Cuba with financial transactions and in qualifying for financing.

Being included on this list is not merely symbolic, however unfair it is.  It has real-world consequences, due to the economic and military power of the U.S.: Countries included on the list are subject to possible sanctions, including cancellation of scientific and cultural interchanges, suspension of aid for development, and restrictions on exports.

Cuba does not belong on the U.S. list of State Sponsors of Terrorism!

There is absolutely no evidence of any kind to show Cuba has carried out, planned, supported or sponsored any acts of terrorism! By contrast, Cuba has repeatedly been the victim of U.S.-sponsored acts of terrorism, including bombings and sabotage. For many years, Cuba’s international role has been marked by providing medical aid to other countries, doing so for free for poor countries and in disaster situations.

The United States is pressuring other governments, banking institutions and companies throughout the world to penalize Cuba. The U.S. also obsessively pursues other means to block any sources of “hard currency” transactions for Cuba, so that Cuba lacks access to the internationally accepted (“hard”) currencies used in global trade. The intention of the U.S. actions is to cause an economic collapse — which is considered an act of war by international law.

Resolutions show public agreement that it’s time for the U.S. to remove Cuba from the "terrorism list", end the U.S. blockade, and normalize Cuba-U.S. relations!

You can take action by organizing to pass resolutions in your city council and other organizations, in support of normalizing U.S.-Cuba relations. WILPF’s Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issue Committee is here to help you! We can answer question, provide background information, and connect you to additional references. Contact us at Venceremos@wilpfus.org.

We can create a constituency for positive change!

Take the resolution to your union,  church, professional associations, your city council or board of supervisors.

A sample resolution is here. WILPF US has passed a resolution already! So have other organizations and local governments, representing millions of people in the U.S.

What is the U.S. basis for placing Cuba on this list?

The U.S. presents several reasons.

Cuba’s refusal to extradite Assata Shakur to the U.S. is one of the U.S. pretexts to claim Cuba is a sponsor of terrorism. Assata Shakur fled the U.S. after COINTELPRO persecution and prosecution. She was granted asylum in Cuba in 1984, as a U.S. political prisoner.

Another U.S. “charge” is that Cuba supports the elected government of Venezuela. The U.S. has claimed that the Venezuela elections were improper. Disagreeing with the U.S. policy on a third country is not terrorism. The U.S. is simply seeking to control the foreign affairs of another country.

In a third instance, Cuba helped support the negotiations that eventually led to greater internal peace in Colombia. However, after the earlier Havana peace talks between the Colombian government and ELN (National Liberation Army) rebels failed, Cuba permitted the ELN representatives to remain in Cuba until safeguards for their return to Colombia were put into place — following the international agreements regarding all negotiating parties.

Rather than being evidence of “terrorism,” these actions demonstrate the ethical nature of Cuba.  A more pragmatic, less idealistic, state would have treated Shakur and the ELN representatives as bargaining chips. It is greatly to Cuba’s credit that — even under the extreme conditions created by the pandemic, natural disasters like Hurricane Ian, and the U.S. blockade —  they have refused to make deals with the lives of these people.

Please help!  Inclusion on the “State Sponsors of Terrorism” list means Cuba has reduced-access to food and medicine for its people, reduced ability to combat climate change, and reduced ability to rebuild after hurricanes and the pandemic. You can help by introducing resolutions in support of Cuba in your community. The U.S. attacks on Cuba are wrong, and they hurt people.

Links to sample resolution

Also, click here for a helpful toolkit of pointers to aid your work in supporting a resolution. For any additional questions, please contact the WILPF Cuba & Bolivarian Alliance Committee at Venceremos@wilpfus.org.

 

 

Post date: Fri, 12/23/2022 - 08:23

A group of tour guides in their national dress pose in front of the Knotted Gun sculpture at UN Headquarters in NYC. Photo credit: UN Photo/Andrea Brizzi, from the United Nations Facebook page.

by Genie Silver, Jan Corderman, Louise Lisi, & Tura Campanella Cook
Middle East Peace & Justice Action Committee Leadership Team

January 2023

Antisemitism signifies hatred of Jews and the ways that hatred is perpetuated, not just through age-old conspiracy theories but also their modern variants espoused on social media and elsewhere. But the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) supports defining antisemitism in a way that would consider political discourse critical of the Israeli government as antisemitism. In condemning all speech against the Israeli government, the IHRA definition serves to label all critics of Israel and pro-Palestinian activists as antisemites.

While we agree with the first sentence of the IHRA definition,“Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred toward Jews,” the definition goes on to list eleven manifestations of antisemitism including a subjective description of political speech equating criticism of Israel with antisemitism. The factual statement that settlements (Jewish-only) in the Occupied West Bank are illegal according to Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention would be considered antisemitic hate speech according to the larger IHRA definition.

Following the IHRA’s release of their definition of antisemitism a few years ago, 122 Palestinian and Arab scholars, journalists, and public intellectuals spoke to the dangers of the IHRA Definition of Antisemitism in a letter published in The Guardian:

“Antisemitism must be debunked and combatted. … [N]o expression of hatred for Jews as Jews should be tolerated anywhere in the world. . . . The fight against antisemitism must, however, be approached in a principled manner, lest it defeat its purpose.  The fight against antisemitism should not be turned into a stratagem to delegitimize the fight against the oppression of the Palestinians, the denial of their rights and the continued occupation of their land. . .” (see Palestinian Rights and the IHRA Definition of Antisemitism)

In November 2022, 128 global scholars of Holocaust and Antisemitism Studies, Modern Jewish History, and related fields published a statement urging the UN not to adopt the IHRA definition of antisemitism, stating:   

“Let us be clear: we wholeheartedly welcome the commitment of the UN to fight antisemitism and commend the UN for its vital efforts in this regard. What we object to and strongly warn against is that the UN would jeopardize this essential fight and harm its universal mission to promote human rights by endorsing a politicized definition that is instrumentalized to deter free speech and to shield the Israeli government from accountability for its actions.” (see 128 scholars ask UN not to adopt IHRA definition of anti-Semitism)

Unfortunately, over 30 countries including the United States have endorsed the IHRA definition. Now Israel has announced plans to take it to the United Nations for adoption on International Holocaust Remembrance Day on January 27, 2023.

White supremacist attacks in the US on Jews and people of color have been on the rise. Politicizing the definition of antisemitism is not the way to stop antisemitism. WILPF stands against all forms of bigotry, discrimination, and hate, including antisemitism and Islamophobia. We organize across issues to create societies where all people have value and equal rights.  

We should remember the Holocaust. We should also know about and remember the Nakba,

Israel's ethnic cleansing of Palestine, exiling of Palestinians and making them into refugees, dispossession of Palestinian property, destruction of Palestinian cities, towns, and villages, and attempt to erase the existence of the Palestinian people from their homeland in 1948. (from The Nakba and Palestine Refugees / IMEU Questions and Answers)

To acknowledge and remember the Nakba is not hatred toward Jews. Is acknowledgement and remembrance of the Holocaust hatred toward Germans? Both remembrances are calls to understand root causes and prevent repetition.

WILPF’s Middle East Peace & Justice Action Committee urges you to take action to prevent the UN from adopting the IHRA definition of antisemitism. Please accept our thanks, in advance, for finding the time to ACT NOW!

What You Can Do

Ask LINDA THOMAS-GREENFIELD, US Ambassador to the UN, to vote against the adoption of the IHRA definition of antisemitism. Let her know that endorsement of this politicized definition would deter free speech and shield the Israeli government from accountability. It is not antisemitic to hold the Israeli government (or any government) accountable for its human rights abuses. Adoption of the IHRA definition would harm the UN’s mission to promote human rights for all people.

Ask your senators and representatives (find your member here) to reject IHRA’s definition of antisemitism. Palestinians have been and still are being displaced from their homes and land by the Israeli military forces and illegal Israeli settlements. It is not hatred toward Jews (antisemitism) to point this out and hold Israel accountable. It is our First Amendment right to speak out against human rights violations, especially when our tax dollars are funding the Israeli Defense Forces; every year, the US gives $3.8-$4.8 billion in military aid to Israel. The Leahy law prohibits US military aid to countries that violate human rights.

Support the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement that works to pressure Israel to comply with international law. There are anti-BDS laws in 35 states that, like the IHRA definition of antisemitism, want to silence, and in this case criminalize, the nonviolent struggle for Palestinian rights. Advocating compliance with international law, the goal of BDS, is not hatred toward Jews (antisemitism).

The best way to stand against antisemitism is to stand in solidarity with all struggles for justice and against all racism, bigotry, oppression, and injustice!

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 08:32

 

January 2023

Virtual “Gathering” Approved for Summer 2023

by Dianne Blais    
WILPF US Gathering Chair

The WILPF US Board recently approved a virtual “Gathering” for 2023. To avoid possible confusion, we don’t use the word “Congress” since the Bylaws have special provisions pertaining to WILPF Congresses.

The Gathering could be a time for workshops, but preferably these can be put off until 2024 when an in-person or hybrid Congress is being planned.

I anticipate this virtual Gathering to be two evenings this summer. One evening will be a time when each board, staff and issue committee chair speaks and can then be asked questions. The other evening can be when one representative from each branch can speak and then there will be a short Q&A.

This Gathering is a way to keep in touch with members and let you know what is happening in WILPF US. It will take place in years when there is neither an International nor a national Congress. Send me your ideas and stay tuned for more info: Secretary@wilpfUS.org.
 

Please Join and Use WILPF SMART (our Social Media Action Response Team, on Facebook)!

Please encourage all WILPF members who use Facebook to join WILPF SMART at this link. This is our community blog set up to help us all inform and inspire each other, all over the country!

This organizing tool has been set up for WILPF members to share videos, photos, articles, resources & more with each other, and with the public. Originally designed so that only WILPF members could post, it was later decided that people whose Facebook pages reveal that they share the same values and concerns as WILPF may join and post to WILPF SMART, without having to join WILPF, although of course we would be delighted if you do! It's easy to become a member of WILPF US. Find out how here!

Whether you're a member of a branch or at-large, please make announcements here, and share photos and descriptions of your accomplishments! Issue Committee leaders and members, let us know what your plans and priorities and meeting dates are! Use WILPF SMART to organize, educate, and SPREAD THE WORD!
 

Jane Addams Virtual Branch Members Are Not At-large Members

by Dianne Blais
Convener, Jane Addams Virtual Branch

The Jane Addams (JA) Virtual Branch is a branch whose members may live anywhere, yet they can get all the news from the branches listserv that other branch members get. We also have a monthly meeting where we’ve had guest speakers and where questions can be asked and discussed. We are WILPF US's VIRTUAL BRANCH!

At-large members are WILPF US members who are not associated with a branch and who don’t desire to get the news from the branches listserv. (To me, the information sent via the branches listserv is vital to the understanding and involvement in WILPF US.)

Any Jane Addams Virtual Branch member can switch to being an at-large member at any time by unsubscribing to my JA branch emails.

I invite more at-large members to become JA members. Please feel free to contact me with questions or comments: Dianne Blais, Secretary@wilpfUS.org, 703-830-1998 (cell: 703-300-7937).

 

Post date: Thu, 12/22/2022 - 08:15

WILPF CSW Forum Participants enjoy the evening together in 2019, the last year meetings were held in person.

By Jan Corderman
Co-coordinator of WILPF’s CSW Programs

January 2023

The UN Commission on the Status of Women will hold its 67th session March 6-17, 2023, with the priority theme: “Innovation and technological change, and education in the digital age for achieving gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls.”

Our Section partners with WILPF International each year to send a small delegation of university students and WILPF US members to participate in the CSW Forum at the United Nations headquarters in New York City. This access is made available through our CSW Programs: PracticumInAdvocacy and LocalToGlobal.

Applications for both the Practicum in Advocacy and Local to Global programs will be accepted until January 6, 2023. Find the applications here.

CSW Programs Help Build WILPF for the Future

The PracticumInAdvocacy Program began in 2008 and is specifically tailored for university and college students looking to learn and expand their advocacy skills on an international level. The LocalToGlobal program was launched to send WILPF members to participate alongside the students. Participants in both programs network with experts in their field, meet with peers, and develop a deeper understanding of WILPF’s work.   

Our CSW Programs are also a way for WILPF US to expand access to the UN among our membership and give us the opportunity to advocate on behalf of WILPF at the same time.

The week includes an orientation session and networking evening event on March 5, followed by participation in Consultation Day open to all civil society participants. Consultation Day is hosted by NGO CSW/NY, “a coalition of hundreds of organizations and individuals working within the United Nations community to advance gender equality and empowerment of women and girls across the globe.” This event serves as an orientation to the Forum, particularly highlighting the annual priority and review themes.

Our Program Coordinators, Jan Corderman and Shilpa Pandey, will hold morning update sessions and evening gatherings through March 11 featuring briefings from WILPF’s Peace Women & Reaching Critical Will staff, WILPF US Issue Committee Chairs, and others to help bring focus to a truly global community focused on standing for human rights, gender equality, feminine peace and the building of relationships. These gatherings, along with the sessions participants select from the many offerings at the Forum, empower us as women and help build WILPF for the future.

Through both Programs we look for ways to energize WILPF at the local, national and international levels. The Practicum offers a really unique opportunity for outreach, mentorship, and mutual learning between seasoned WILPF members and students who are already activists and advocates in their own right. Maybe you have a daughter or granddaughter who is a university student majoring in women/gender or environmental studies, government or foreign relations? Ask her to consider discussing the PracticumInAdvocacy program with a professor or department head.

Are you interested in expanding the work your Branch may already be doing or developing an issue you’re working with a committee on? Through our LocalToGlobal program, we hope to provide an opportunity to deepen our knowledge of WILPF’s work and offer ideas that will help further develop that work.

Continued Engagement with WILPF US Branches and Members, Issue Committees, and Solidarity Actions

WILPF CSW Forum Participants
WILPF CSW Forum Participants enjoy the evening together in 2019, the last year meetings were held in person.

Our goal is to engage each participant based on their area of expertise and geographical location.  All participants will be asked to create opportunities and ideas to expand and improve upon the WILPF US CSW programs during our week together and find ways to apply what they take from the Forum to enhance programs and events at the national and branch levels.

All of us can share what we learn at CSW67 (2023) and move that knowledge forward locally in our own activism/advocacy work.

Here are some delegate experiences, in their own words:

“Participating in CSW 2019 broadened my understanding of the issues prevailing in different parts of the world and exposed me to progressive approaches and policy solutions that proved to be successful in achieving women’s empowerment and gender equality,”

“I’m walking away with a more acute awareness of gender equity issues plaguing women and girls around the world and an understanding of how many of these issues are connected and can therefore be solved by more intentional and collaborative efforts. I’m also walking away with an understanding of my role in making sure we’re taking these tenets and bringing them back to the policy world so policies are intersectional and empowering. We’re not fixing communities but empowering communities to do the work themselves. It’s important to look at empowerment and know it doesn’t work the same for everyone.”

There are still a few days left to get in applications to these valuable programs! Again, you can find the applications here.

For more information contact:  jancorderman@msn.com or emailtoshilpa@yahoo.com

 

 

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