NEWS

Post date: Thu, 11/07/2013 - 16:43

Dear IB members and Sections,

There have been many exciting, new developments that the International Secretariat would like to share with you. 

For the first time ever, WILPF International Secretariat has created an Annual Report providing an overview of the major activities and events of our three programmes and our MENA Agenda 1325 Project.

It features interviews with a diverse array of WILPF members and provides an overview of Sections’ work for the year.

We are very proud of our Annual Report for 2012, be sure to check it out! 

Read Annual Report online

Download Annual Report

Read Audits 2012

Updated WILPF Newsletter: Membership News

Announcing the arrival of the first edition of our updated newsletter, Membership News. If you did not receive it, then read the first issue here!

The newsletter replaces the former WILPF International Update and will better portray the diverse work of our Sections and International members. 

So what is new?

  • Everyone can subscribe to the newsletter
  • The content focuses even more on Sections' work
  • You can translate the newsletter into your own language. Just click the link on the right corner of the newsletter! 

How does the Newsletter work?

Sections should submit their news and updates including text and photos to communications@wilpf.ch.

For the rest of 2013 we will distribute the newsletter according to the quantity of news we receive from our Sections. So this cannot work without your input!

For 2014 and the foreseeable future, the Sections will receive publication timelines, which will summarize publication dates and deadlines for Sections to submit news and information. So the sooner you email us your news, the better!

How can you help?

To help make this updated newsletter successful, please share the subscription link to other WILPF members in your section: http://eepurl.com/H6VC1. Since this newsletter is reserved for WILPF members only, we request that you don't post the link on social media (i.e. Facebook).  

It has been a great year for communications at the International Secretariat and we know that with your help, next year will be even better. 

 

In Peace,

The International Secretariat 

Post date: Thu, 11/07/2013 - 15:57

In November, as we approach the end of our 2013 campaign to abolish nuclear weapons by 2020, we close with a progress report. We believe we have built solid foundations for our continuing work on ridding our world of these most monstrous and immoral of weapons. We are supporting Mayors for Peace resolutions and specific legislation in Congress, all of which call for abolition by 2020. We will again have an opportunity to go to Congress with the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability in the spring and from April 28 to May 12 the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Prep Com will again be at the United Nations in New York. If our own national leaders prove obdurate we will support those working for a ban treaty.

Our members and branches will continue seeking abolition of the nuclear industry that has grown up around nuclear weapons including nuclear power, uranium mining, and transport of high level liquid waste. Our primary purpose, as always, is to end war itself. Read a brief report on what lies ahead in November on the nuclear industry, drones, and ending wars here.


PROGRESS REPORT ON NUCLEAR WEAPONS ABOLITION BY 2020

IS YOUR MAYOR A MAYOR FOR PEACE?  

The WILPF DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee has set aside funds to help your Branch bring Jackie Cabasso to your community. She can assist in utilizing the US Conference of Mayors powerful resolutions on abolition of nuclear weapons in order to save the cities.  Along with everything else, Jackie is also a Life  Member of WILPF.

Download the Mayors for Peace 2013 toolkit from our joint UFPJ Nuclear Free Future website. You can access one of those US Mayors unanimous resolutions there. You will also find a model city council resolution. It is time your community knows about this project and acts to bring it into reality. You will find many other resources in the toolkit, including information on how to bring your own city into the Mayors for Peace Vision 2020 project if none of your mayors have ever joined..

GREAT NEWS! Representative Raul Grijalva of Arizona, co-chair of the Progressive Caucus is co-sponsoring HR 1650! Thanks to Pat Birnie (formerly of Tucson) and Coralie Farlee(Washington D.C. Branch convener) for contacting him in his Washington D.C. office!

Join us as we resurrect EYE on Congress for many years edited by Val Mullen. Members of our committee will assist branches in finding more co-sponsors starting with Representatives in the Progressive Caucus. It is time to bring the call for nuclear abolition within a short time frame into the US Congress. 35 of our branches have Progressive Caucus members in their Districts. And it is time to give moral courage to other Representatives as well!

Impossible? Not if the will is there. But the nine nuclear weapons states, led by the US, are by now addicted  to their nuclear weapons and are spending billions to upgrade, rather than dismantle, them. So it falls to us, the little people, the hobbits of the world, to call forth that will in ourselves and those around us.

WILPFers Ray Acheson, Beatrice Fihn, Jackie Cabasso and Alice Slater are all doing amazing work at the United Nations. We agreed at our monthly meeting on Sunday night, October 27, to sign on to the very broad and intelligent document they and other NGO representatives have prepared for General Assembly Delegates when they consider the resolutions from the First Committee in early November.  

The NGOs support the full range of efforts to negotiate a nuclear weapons abolition treaty within the United Nations, but if the nuclear nations remain recalcitrant WILPF Reaching Critical Will and the other NGOs urge the 134 non-nuclear nations that are leading the movement for abolition by 2020—or, in the case of the nonaligned nations, at least no later than 2025—to go outside of the UN (as they did for land mines and cluster bombs) to negotiate a nuclear weapons ban treaty. It could be similar to the chemical weapons ban, that makes possession, production or use of these weapons of mass destruction illegal, requires destruction of stocks and production facilities and includes UN inspections of the process. It would not be a final solution, but could be a large step on the way and achieved within a very short time.

WILPF Reaching Critical Will, which facilitates NGO work at the United Nations, has enthusiastically joined the I CAN coalition as have most, or all, of the other NGOs seeking nuclear weapons abolition. The coalition was initiated by IPPNW, the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, (also the parent organization of PSR – USA) and includes everyone from Desmond Tutu and the Dalai Lama to Martin Sheen and Yoko Ono. The proposal for a Ban treaty is best presented here.

Photo: Ray Acheson, Director, Reaching Critical Will

Post date: Thu, 11/07/2013 - 15:56
Post date: Thu, 11/07/2013 - 14:44

By Mary Hanson Harrison, Des Moines Branch

In our earth, in our bodies and on our plates, the direction of agri-culture is a crucible for determining our ability to survive and thrive on our planet. During the 4th week of October 2013, WILPF Des Moines Branch led the call, with many other organizations joining in, for our chemical-laden agri-industrial complex to stop the poisoning our food system and end the use GMOs.

Why us, why now? The World Food Prize Organization, headquartered in Des Moines, presents an annual international award recognizing “individuals who have advanced human development in improving the quality, quantity or availability of food in the world.” Founded by Norman Borlaug and his idea of a “Green Revolution” for combating world hunger and poverty, the World Food Prize (WFP) is now in the hands of Monsanto, DuPont Pioneer, Archer Daniels Midland Company, Syngenta Foundation, and other like-minded agri-industries and organizations. The three recipients this year are pioneers in biotechnology; one is the chief technology officer for Monsanto (see attached Rekha Basu article).

Last year, WILPF DSM provided a forum for the Food Sovereignty Prize (FSP) recipients [Ms. Jeomak Bak, head of the South Korean Women’s Peasant Movement]. This October, during WFP week, we extended the same offer to the FSP recipients [Haiti and Brazil]  to participate in our street activism with the devil in full view and the Jane Bibber Memorial Symposium and Strong Feisty Woman Award Luncheon. The day-long symposium featured workshops with Iowa agriculture’s best and brightest; along with Hans Herren, world-renowned scientist (who received the 1995 WFP) and Njoki Njoroge Njehu, a woman farmer and activist from Kenya. Frances Moore Lappé, noted author and environmentalist, and our own former co-president and Move to Amend champion, Marybeth Gardam received our 6th annual Strong Feisty Woman Award.

Top photo: Diane Krell, Marybeth Gardam, and Deb Vanko, a Des Moines WILPF member who organized the DEVIL MASK protest against Monsanto

Photos, left to right: Marybeth Gardam, WILPF-US, recipient 6th Annual Strong Feisty Woman Award; Njoki Njoroge Njehu, Director, Solidarity African Network in Action, Kenya; Frances Moore Lappé, noted author and environmentalist, recipient 6th Annual Strong Feisty Woman Award

Post date: Thu, 11/07/2013 - 14:23

by Cynthia Cockburn (built on Committee work started at Bolivia Congress)

WILPF International wants your feedback on this proposed manifesto for WILPF in the next 100 years!* The manifesto was compiled by Cynthia Cockburn and Cynthia’s letter introduces its content and proposed format and asks that you send along your suggestions for changes, additions or deletions. Please send comments directly to Catia Confortini (catiacc@gmail.com) who, as WILPF-US Representative to the International Board is in charge of summarizing members’ responses and forwarding them to the convener of the Political Content working group for our 2015 Congress.


Dear fellow WILPFers,

You were good enough to entrust me with drafting a WILPF centenary Manifesto for you all to consider and discuss. With some trepidation I now put foward to you this draft document. I am calling it the Second Draft, because it benefits from the guidance I received on a First Draft I put forward in May for consideration by four women who had been designated my key informants, that is: Edith Ballantyne, Madeline Rees, Felicity Hill and Kirsten Greback. 

When I was at the International Board meeting in Madrid last February, I asked quite a few WILPF members for their ideas as to how long the Manifesto should be. Some said “a couple of pages," some said “up to twenty." Difficult! Well, this document runs to almost 6000 words. I hope we might find ways of making it shorter, rather than longer during the discussion and redrafting process of the coming year. I think of it as printed in the form of an A5-sized booklet, probably running to 28 pages. Imagine 8 sheets of A4 typing paper, folded in half and stapled in the middle.

I am keeping always in mind the idea that we could preface the whole thing with an "actual," very short, one-page summary statement that would BE the actual "Manifesto"—something we could use in coming years in many ways, on many occasions. But I saw no point in drafting such a succinct statement until you have all had a chance to mull over the content of this longer document, which I see as a positioning of WILPF between past, present and future at this crucial moment in time: 2015.

  • You will see that I open with three pages or so on our history and the significance of the centenary.  
  • This is followed by a succinct restatement of our purposes. 
  • And this again is followed by a longish section on our current programme of work, under the usual three headings. I have tried to make this clearly and repetitively  "of now", our contemporary reality. 
  • Then there is the 'boxed' section on WILPF's organization. It is boxed because I don't want it to impede the flow of the narrative from present to future. Its value lies in enabling us to flag up "integration" which is a key watchword in Wilpf at the moment. 
  • Finally, comes the section I see as the most creative, even visionary, part: "Looking ahead: our future tasks." You will see for yourselves what I have identified, with the help of Edith, Madeleine, Felicity and Kerstin, as the specific challenges we will face and how we may respond to them.

You will notice that I have dropped into the narrative some "text boxes" containing quotations from WILPFers of the past. I would also like to propose that the booklet contains six or eight photographs. We could start perhaps with one of the Ypres battlefield, end with one of lively young activist women of today. What do you think?

Note that there are some facts and figures in this draft that are "hostage to fortune." The world will move on in the next 12 months, so I have placed some passages in square brackets as a reminder that they will need amending in a final draft. 

I only scraped together the confidence to tackle the task of writing this draft Manifesto by reminding myself that it is going to be subject to long and rigorous review by great number of individuals, committees and working groups in WILPF, women much wiser and more experienced than I am. What convinced me to take the risk of laying my thoughts out to view in this way is that I am convinced the process of consultation that now follows must surely benefit us all, whatever the eventual outcome.

Happy reading, happy discussions! Count me in!

All the best,

Cynthia Cockburn

Member of WILPF London branch and UK Section.

Honorary Professor in the Department of Sociology, City University London, and Visiting Professor in the Centre for the Study of Women and Gender, Warwick University.

 

*See also Notes from ExCom members on draft 2 of Manifesto

Post date: Wed, 11/06/2013 - 09:24

Dear Members,

We want your input and ideas for our next 100 years! Here you will find the vision and goals created by our 4 break-out groups during our September retreat. They are Program, Finance and Development, Communications, and Personnel.  We were told to think big- focus on our hopes and dreams for WILPF-US. Our break out group visions and goals are meant to function as a working document. Nothing about this has been set in stone. Everything is open for debate and new ideas. The details will come later, now is the time to create our shared future.

It is our hope that all WILPF-US members will help shape our future by contributing. We also hope that regional and branch meetings will take the time to discuss and contribute to this collaboration. When commenting, think about all of the great promise WILPF has and the big picture ways you hope WILPF will thrive in the next 100 years.

Please take the time to share your comments. In order to prevent spam, comments will be moderated, and may take one to two days to post. If there are any problems using this site, please let us know.

Let’s make history!

To learn more, visit the WILPF: 100 Years Forward site.

 

Post date: Thu, 10/10/2013 - 12:40

This Program offers Support for Delegates from WILPF Branches interested in participating in the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women meetings in New York from March 7-15, 2015. You’ll be working at the UN as a member of an eight person delegation, bringing WILPF perspectives into conversations with government and NGO representatives, learning the ropes, and preparing to take UN advocacy strategies and campaigns back to your local branch and beyond. Submit the application below for consideration. Submission instructions are included in the application.

Local2Global Application

 

Post date: Thu, 10/10/2013 - 12:27

Interested in strengthening advocacy skills, making and sustaining valuable contacts, and expanding your knowledge and insight regarding international women’s issues? 

Our annual 2014 UN Practicum in Advocacy at the United Nations is a great way to get more experience and delve into the core of Women’s issues. You’ll get a chance to attend the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), held at UN headquarters in New York City! This year’s theme is Challenges and achievements in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals for women and girls.”

Are you ready to learn about these important issues through workshops and meetings? Tuition of $1499 will include access to the CSW, accommodation, food, program materials, and a cultural event. Apply by November 8, 2013 at 5 pm EST to secure your spot. 

Advocate at the UN

1) When: March 8 – March 15, 2014

2) Where: UN Headquarters in New York City

3) Who: Undergraduate, graduate, and professional students from across the nation

4) Why attend: Strengthen your skill-set in advocacy, increase your knowledge of international women's issues, and gain valuable contacts and insight into UN processes

5) What you have to do: Submit an application by November 1, 2013 at 5 p.m. and then raise money to attend

6) Cost: $1499 covers cost of lodging, food, program materials, registration and entrance to CSW, NGO preparatory meeting, membership to the Y-WILPF (the young women’s caucus of WILPF), and daily briefings from faculty and other experts. Once accepted, please submit your payment via this link. A $200 deposit holds your spot.

The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and the Center for Women's Health and Human Rights at Suffolk University (CWHHR) are offering the opportunity for college and university students to attend the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) meetings at the United Nations in New York from March 8 - March 15, 2014.

The CSW is dedicated exclusively to gender equality and the advancement of women. Representatives from member states gather to identify problems and issues affecting women internationally. CSW meetings are typically attended by thousands of women affiliated with non-governmental organizations (NGOs) from around the world. Alongside the official discussions and reports, these NGOs sponsor hundreds of "side events" such as panels, workshops and performances addressing local and international issues affecting women.

The 2014 priority theme of the CSW is “Challenges and achievements in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals for women and girls.”  The Commission will also evaluate progress in the implementation of the agreed conclusions from its fifty-fifth session on ““Access and participation of women and girls to education, training, science and technology, including for the promotion of women’s equal access to full employment and decent work””. Students participate as delegates of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, and contribute to the official documentation of both official and informal meetings. This program is open to women enrolled at any college or university in the United States, and provides ample opportunities for peer-to-peer learning and exploring career opportunities in international relations and advocacy work.

Students interested in being a part of the college and university women's delegation are urged to apply. Students should also identify a faculty member from their home institution who will help negotiate collaboration between WILPF/NWSA/CWHHR and the student's college or university. 

The tuition for the Practicum is $1499, which includes lodging offered on a multiple occupancy basis. The tuition fee will cover all meals, lodging, registration and entrance to the CSW, NGO preparatory meetings, program materials, membership to Y-WILPF (the young women's caucus of WILPF) and daily briefings from faculty and other experts. (The fee does not include transportation to New York City or public transportation during the week's stay). Limited scholarship funding is available and students are encouraged to raise money on their campuses and in their home communities to support their attendance.

LINK TO PRACTICUM IN ADVOCACY FLYER

LINK TO PRACTICUM IN ADVOCACY APPLICATION

LINK TO UN PRACTICUM IN ADVOCACY PRACTICUM  FACULTY REFERENCE FORM

SUBMIT ALL MATERIALS TO (unpracticum2014@wilpfus.org) BY November 8, 2013, at 5 pm EST.

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