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Post date: Fri, 05/02/2014 - 12:16

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“Global Detroit: Women, Democracy, and Corporate Power”

When people think of Detroit, the automotive industry, Motown, and unions come to mind. And now, bankruptcy. The bankruptcy proceedings, in which a judge determines which of the hundreds of creditors, banks, and pensioners will take a “haircut” and how much of a loss, has revealed the devastating impact of corporate power on the city. For example, potentially illegal “credit default swaps” have jeopardized the city’s pension system, and city workers are facing cut-backs in their modest pensions. The “shock doctrine” described by Naomi Klein is being implemented worldwide and in Detroit, including proposals to privatize the water system and garbage pick-up. While upscale housing and a tax-payer-subsidized hockey arena are emerging downtown, the long-suffering neighborhoods are on the receiving end of poor city services, thousands of home foreclosures, and “charterized,” privately run schools. What’s global is local. “Global Detroit” is a showcase for the forces of corporate greed and a microcosm of these same forces in United State and around the world. How we struggle against these forces and demand more democracy is the challenge of the day. 

A Challenge to Ourselves

On the eve of the 100th anniversary of WILPF International, our Triennial Congress presents an opportunity to envision our organization for the twenty-first century. The congress will be the time and place for us to reconnect, gather ideas, inspire each other, strategize, and recommit to building a better WILPF, a better movement. The Detroit Branch issues a challenge to all our branches: to increase membership and thus activism, to engage in building movements that challenge corporate power and further democracy in every area of our work, whether it be peace, disarmament, human rights, the environment, the Middle East, or other areas

In our work, we and other peace and justice activists often find ourselves “preaching to the choir.” We need to increase the size of that choir by recruiting and activating new members. But perhaps in this age of social media and Depression economics, when so many people are struggling just to survive, we need to rethink what it means to be a member. How do we engage the younger generation of women (and men)? How do young women define membership in an organization? Is it something different from the dues-paying, meeting-attending model? How do we combine the newness of their ideas with the wisdom of our experienced members? How do we exploit and keep up with electronic media to facilitate WILPF’s work? These are some questions we can consider at the congress. 

Workshops and Plenaries

Branches and individuals are now proposing workshops. Click here to download a workshop application. Some of the topics include the Middle East Nuclear Free Zone and other areas covered by our issue committees; governance issues; “How To” (skills); and an intergenerational workshop by Y-WILPF women. A list of specific workshop topics will be announced. 

Activities and Events

  • Detroit Bus Tour. Those arriving early on Thursday, July 31, can take a bus tour of Detroit. This two-hour tour on a school bus (beginning at 2 pm), will highlight the civil rights and labor history of Detroit. It will include stops at the Labor Legacy and Underground Railroad monuments near the Detroit River.
  • A Conversation among Activists. On Thursday evening, we will present a conversation among activist-leaders, including Edith Ballantyne, former international WILPF president; Medea Benjamin of Code Pink; Adilia Caravaca, WILPF International president; and Jill Stein of the Global Climate Convergence. The discussion will center on the challenges facing the peace and justice movements. Where are we today? How do we challenge the corporate power that is strengthening its hold on our day-to-day lives? How do we build a strong movement? This discussion will surely be thought provoking and inspirational. 
  • Meet the New Board Members. Thursday evening will be capped by a reception where members will meet members of our new board and have the opportunity to socialize. 
  • Detroit Forum. On Friday evening, we are holding a forum on Detroit that will bring global issues down to the local level. Detroit’s problems—bankruptcy, high unemployment, the housing crisis, threats of privatization, and so on—are playing out in many places around the world. A panel of Detroit activists will include those working on labor and pension rights, environmental justice, the anti-foreclosure movement, sustainable neighborhoods, and more. You will hear about the grassroots struggles for a better Detroit—information you will not find in the mainstream media.  
  • Culture and Socializing. Saturday evening will be a night for culture and socializing in a relaxed, casual setting. You will be treated to music, dance, and poetry by established Detroit artists and performers. [We hope to hold the event in a nearby art gallery where you can sample the Detroit arts scene.]

Accommodations

Members will stay at the Towers Residential Suites (dorms) on the campus of Wayne State University (WSU). Each unit has four private, single bedrooms, a shared living room, and two half-bathrooms.  A limited number of one-bed, two-bed, and handicap-accessible units are available. Free Internet access will be available in the dorms and at the McGregor Center. Other amenities in the Towers include a small fitness center and lounges for socializing. A convenience store, coffee shop, and copy store are located near the dorms. You can take a virtual tour of the Towers on the university’s housing website.

The congress will be held at the beautiful McGregor Center on the main campus, a short distance from the dorms. We’ll take most of our meals at McGregor. Saturday-night dinner and Sunday lunch will be on your own at area restaurants. 

Things to Do

Because the congress will be short, there won’t be much time for touring. But members who arrive early or stay late can visit a few places nearby that are “must-sees.” The Diego Rivera murals at the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Old Streets of Detroit in the Detroit Historical Museum, and the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History are just a few. 

Branch Displays

A room at the McGregor Center will be set aside for branches to display their flyers and other materials. Let us know what your branch is up to. If your branch worked on a unique project, a set of instructions on how to launch the project would be useful to others. Let’s use this opportunity to spread our ideas and to inspire each other. 

Fund-Raising for the Congress and Scholarships

Fund-raising efforts will include a silent auction and a tribute book. Details will be announced in May. Branches are encouraged to fund-raise for sending members to the congress. And if you wish to donate to the scholarship fund, please indicate this on the registration form. 

PROGRAM BOOK: Each Congress participant will receive a beautiful program book. Organizations, individuals, and WILPF branches are invited to place an ad. Would you or your branch like to honor a WILPF member or someone who has inspired you to become a peace activist? Memorialize a deceased member or loved one? Or highlight a branch project? Your ad will help defray the costs of the congress. Camera-ready copy is preferred, but we can design your ad for you. Click here for the order form. Or email tribute2014@wilpfus.org and we’ll send you the form. DEADLINE: JUNE 30.

We’ll Be in Touch

Registrants will receive updates on workshops, transportation information, and other details as the planning progresses, preferably via e-mail but also by postal mail for those not using the Internet.  

 

Have any questions? E-mail Laura Dewey, the Congress Coordinator, at CongressCoordinator@wilpfus.org.

The Detroit Branch warmly welcomes you to Detroit. See you there!

Photo: Michigan Labor Legacy Landmark: “Transcending."

Post date: Thu, 04/10/2014 - 10:02

by Edith Bell, WILPF-US Pittsburgh Branch

Pradeep Indulkar,  a nuclear engineer from India, showed his award winning documentary "High Power" at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) in Pittsburgh on March 3 on his tour through the US.

The event was sponsored by the local group Remembering Hiroshima/ Imagining Peace and WILPF.

"High Power" is set in the village of Tarapur, India, where a power plant was built. It tells the story of following betrayal and slow destruction of the health and livelihood of the 10,000 people who lived there.   

Begun in 1969, the project promised jobs and services, none of which materialized. The film interviews many  residents about the  negative physical consequences they have endured due to radiation exposure, including miscarriages , kidney disorders, high blood pressure, heart problems,  low IQs of children, and how the environment has changed (i.e. deformed coconut trees which do not grow to their full height). Dr. Sonia Sarve reported about the serious infertility issues she observed. The hot water discharge by the nuclear plant warms the temperature of the ocean killing the fish in the area. Fishing was the main trade of the village, the fish that are left  now are unmarketable.  

Nuclear power is currently 3% of the energy used in India and expected to increase to 20% by 2020. In 2009 there were protests and in 2011 Fukushima became another focal point to rally. Because India has 8 months of bright sunshine, one may think solar is a feasible option but the government does not support it.  Pradeep says financial interests control the energy mix.  Westinghouse was mentioned many times as one of the companies who have built power plants in India. There is a huge nuclear power plant currently being planned for the West Coast India.

The film has won the Yellow Oscar in the short film category in the Rio de Janeiro leg of the Uranium Film Festival.

 

Post date: Thu, 04/10/2014 - 09:37

by Coralie Farlee, WILPF-US DC Branch

Gregory Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice and Michael Walli, in July 2012, walked into the Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, Tennessee and up to the Highly Enriched Uranium Maintenance Facility – the building that stores the US’s supply of weapons grade uranium. On February 18, 2014, they were sentenced to 5 years, 3 years, and 5 years, respectively. This was known as the Transform Now Plowshares action, part of the non-violent civil resistance Plowshares movement by people of faith to transform weapons into real, life-giving alternatives, to build true peace.  At the time of their action in 2012, they indicated that the Y-12 facility was chosen because of its plans for a new multi-billion dollar H-bomb factory – the Uranium Processing Facility (UPF).  The sole purpose of the UPF (cost now estimated at $19 billion) is to produce thermonuclear cores for H-bombs and ballistic missile warheads.

The intent of Gregory, Megan, and Michael was to publicize the trillions of US dollars that continue to be spent on nuclear weapons in the US since World War II.  [The US possesses over 4600 active nuclear weapons plus another 3,000 awaiting dismantlement.  To abide by the New START treaty with Russia, the US must reduce the 1,950 strategically deployed high-alert nuclear weapons to 1,500 by 2018.  But, in 2010, in order to obtain ratification by the Senate, President Obama promised an additional $85 billion through 2020 for modernizing the US stockpile.]  

At the trial in May, 2013, the three Plowshares activists were convicted (in a jury trial, requested by the three) on felony charges of depredation of property and sabotage which could have resulted in 30 years in prison for each person.    

Megan Rice, in her allocution at the February  sentencing hearing, indicated:  “This trial has exposed, quite gratuitously, in the evidence, thanks to the prosecution’s witnesses, the truth about what is happening.  That this one facility is part of . . . one, huge, bomb factory, of which Y-12 is but one very significant part.

“We are all grateful . . . that the details of the goings-on at Y-12 were revealed by the witnesses for the government, details kept mostly secret, over nigh to 70 years – the specific warheads being ‘enhanced’ and ‘modernized’ – the enormous quantities of highly enriched uranium material (HEUM) produced and stored there, in the very building we were able, almost unknowingly, to reach, to touch, and to label with statements and symbols of truth.   This alerted Y-12 workers to what has been kept secret for nearly 70 years.

“The direct fall-out from gross misspending to maintain a nuclear industrial complex – of ten trillions of dollars over these last 70 years.  An economic system devoid of any outcome other than death, poverty for the masses in a debt-ridden country, with obscene wealth for the less than 1% of the people – individuals wealthier than the GNP of entire countries and I would ask, from war-profiteering?

” This very document [charges by the contractor to repair damages from the break-in and ensure security] is self-incriminating evidence for all  the world to see.  It represents in microcosm an enormous cloud of deception, exaggerated expenditures in time, energy and cost under which Y-12 has hidden these 70 years since its inception.  It reveals but a sample of the extortion by unaccounted for or unaccountable profiteering and blatant miscalculation over Y-12’s entire evolution till today. – Draconian extortion of the hard-earned labor of the people in this country over the last 70 years, and perhaps before.”

Megan summarized their position by stating that “the true criminals are those who produce or use nuclear arms; not those who are conducting civil resistance and are obeying the law by resisting nuclear arms and preventing war crimes by the government.”

Gregory had earlier summarized his and their position by indicating that “the people . . . recognize that our government disrespects the law; President Obama should be reducing nuclear weapons to ZERO, but, instead, in order to get the New START Treaty signed, he has agreed to build three new factories for the next 70 years:  a CLEAR VIOLATION OF THE LAW [treaty].” He also pointed out that his previous convictions and prison stays had not dissuaded him from engaging in further non-violent civil resistance.

Michael also had referred to the “use of law by the government for criminal uses [i.e., “modernizing”/re-building nuclear weapons] and called for a total worldwide/global demilitarization [to save the earth].

He also referred to the law codified by the Nuremberg Principles which forbid complicity in ongoing crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, and war crimes [such as the planning and preparation of mass destruction].

Judge Thapar, at the pre-trial hearing had ruled out the presentation of a law-based defense, or a “defense of necessity”, i.e., that whether the production of nuclear weapons is unlawful was not relevant and “would confuse the jury.”  [In previous cases, when judges have allowed  juries to consider the outlaw status of nuclear weapons, they regularly find protestors “not guilty by reason of justification.”]

Judge Thapar [at the initial January sentencing hearing] had also sentenced them to pay the $53,000 in contractor’s fees for materials and fees for repairing and repainting and ensuring that the premises were secure.  This is being challenged on the grounds of excessive costs and whether the government has actually paid the invoice that the contractor presented.

In his sentencing statements, Judge Thapar appeared to deliberate over issues such as that they had not used illegal weapons; other significant and recent arrests and prison time; statements of character witnesses; that they have done various community-enriching activities; but that he could not sentence based on beliefs, but only on conduct.   

The Judge also added that “there are plenty of ways for you to protest and deliver your message without breaking the law.” Also: “If you people would just put this time and energy into working for the change you want in the political system, you might get the change you seek.”  Ralph Hutchinson, coordinator of the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, in an eloquent statement available on the OREPA website, responded:  “Really, Judge” and enumerated the various ways that he and colleagues have engaged in non-violent protests, demonstrations; signing petitions, writing letters, as well as meeting with officials, interviews on various media, and other approaches vs. non-violent direct action and vs. major lobbying by contractors and others who are in support of  continuing the US nuclear weapons program.

Appeals are proceeding to dismiss the $53,000 charge and to challenge the charge and conviction of sabotage.  

Sources used and available for additional information:  TransformNowPlowshares.wordpress.com; Dan Zak articles in The Washington Post; orepa.org; michiganpeacenetwork.org; Atomic City Underground; personal notes at sentencing trials. Thanks, also, for comments by Paul Magno.

Photo: Transform Now Three: Gregory Boertje-Obed, Megan Rice and Michael Walli

Post date: Thu, 04/10/2014 - 08:58

Help the United Nations and US Legislators Build Peace

by the DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

Thousands of peace builders from around the world will join us in resisting militarism in the US and in their own countries on April 14-15 this year. Some WILPF US Branches have already planned actions for Tax Day and every WILPFer can take action in some way. Go to the US web pages of the Global Day of Action on Military Spending for rich resources all of us can freely use. Explore any of the other headings across the top of the GDAMS US page and find more wonderful resources. How great to know that so many in the world are standing with us on April 14-15 to end militarism and war and to use our resources instead for human rights and the benefit of all! Our country, tragically, has now become the greatest promoter of war and militarism in the world.

All of April and May WILPF Branches and each of us can take action to ban militarized drones. Go to Know Drones find resources, read about actions and report your own. WILPF US endorses this call to action. 

Register now for Alliance for Nuclear Accountability DC Days May 18-24.

FLASH!  MacGregor Eddy (Monterey Branch) received the Space in Peace award this year for her sustained efforts to end nuclear weapons and missile “defense” testing at Vandenberg Air Force Base. MacGregor, Jackie Cabasso, Alice Slater and Carol Urner all attended the March 14-16 Global Network Conference for Our Committee.

You can freely download and use materials, logos and graphics from both GDAMS and Know Drones. Their organizers will appreciate acknowledgement of the source, however. If it makes sense to you, then download, copy or print and use the flyer on Know Drones proposing a law banning militarized drones.  

Early Bird registration for DC Days ends April 15 but you can continue registering up to the week of the conference. The Sunday training is very important so be sure to be there for the entire day. For out-of-towners that will mean coming into DC by Saturday evening. Please contact Arielle Moncure at arielle@ananuclear.org for details.

Both the NPT and ANA offer deep learning experiences as well as opportunity to contact staff and government officials directly in the United Nations and/or in the US Congress and Administration. 

We suggest that you take time to study any of these four websites: www.demilitarize.org, www.KnowDrones.org, www.ReachingCriticalWill.org or www.ananuclear.org.

If you have questions for which you cannot find answers please contact the co-chairs of the Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee. Email Carol Urner carol.disarm@gmail.org and/or Ellen Thomas et@prop1.org.

 

Post date: Sat, 03/22/2014 - 12:01
2014 WILPF-US board election results have been released. 
 
Term limits: 

NOTE: 2014 is the ONLY year where some people are not elected for a 3 year term. They can, of course, apply to run again when their 1-, 2- or 3-year terms are up. Each person elected starting in 2015 will serve a three year term. Here are the people elected in 2014, and their terms (the voting results are here.)

Altaira - 3 
Deb H - 1
Nicole - 3
Sara Tess - 2
Barbara N - 2 
LaShawndra - 3
Millee - 2
Peggy - 1

 

Welcome to the new WILPF-US Board:

President: Mary Hanson Harrison (Des Moines, IA)

 

Treasurer: Altaira Hatton (San Francisco, CA)

 

Secretary: Deborah Holley (Des Moines, IA)

 

Chair of the Personnel Committee: Nicole Scott (Detroit, MI)

 

Chair of the Development Committee: Sara Tess Neumann (Boston, MA)

 

Chair of the Membership Development Committee: LaShawndra Vernon (Milwaukee, WI)

 

Chair of the Nominating Committee: Barbara Nielsen (San Francisco, CA)

 

Co-Chair of Program Committee (3 yr. term): Odile Hugonot-Haber (Ann Arbor, MI)

 

Co-Chair of the Program Committee (1 yr. term): Deb Garretson (Bloomington, IN)

 

At-large Board Member (3 yr. term): Millee Livingston (Sacramento/Sierra Foothills, CA)

 

At-large Board Member (1 yr. term): Peggy Luhrs (Burlington, VT)

Post date: Fri, 03/14/2014 - 20:03

This experience has made me see activism in a completely different light.
I have a fantastic mentor back home who is a fierce Latina woman. She has amazing energy and vigor for life and the gift of gab--things that can't be taught. She is someone that everyone wishes would rub off on them a bit. So you can just imagine how intimidating it must be to try living up to that example! In the academic world we see so many impressive and competent people, walking around the earth like living encyclopedias. And as students, we fall into their step and are lead by their illustrious examples. Playing the student roll can be great. You can ask stupid questions, people aren't very suspicious if you want to know more about them, you meet a whole roster of new people ever semester, and you get to learn and absorb so many different topics as your occupation! Life as a student is pretty dang great.
Until of course that role inhibits your potential. I have gotten in the habbit of valueing and critiquing other people's perspectives and theories. I am constantly trying to learn what other people think. I take notes on what other people say. My life essentially revolves around OTHER PEOPLE. It is essential to listen and absorb but we tend to loose our own convictions and fire when we do that on a regular basis.
This practicum forced me to examine what makes ME passionate though. When I found that the issues of undocumented citizens, refugees and immigrants are not even issues that are up for discussion on an international level, I surprised myself with how passionately I wanted that to change. I want to change the fact that young people don't feel they have a place in the decision making process and rid marginalization. I want to change the fact that some people don't have a voice because they can't write or don't have access to technology and publishing. That is like saying you don't have an opinion because you don't have money. I want to improve cultural understanding and think of ways that we can empower people through awesomely creative innovations (like the Half the Sky Game). I want to examine and cut the social roots of why violence occurs, like in the cases of violence toward women in Liberia. I want to change the fact that governments don't hold themselves accountable when it is not convenient. I want to see more people unite for a common cause, like in the example of Bosnia and Syria.
And it IS possible for me, a lowly undergraduate, to actually create change. We all percieve ourselves to be less powerful than we are. Whether we doubt our intelligence, our ability to communicate clearly and eloquently, our nerve to be a spokesperson, our ability to be effective, or just doubt that others will listen. Well, I have seen some pretty misinformed, unelloquent, ineffective speakers while here; And if THEY can do it, then WE can definitely do it (and probably do it better!).
I will probably be eating my words the next time I give a presentation.
Seriously though, all the women I have met in the Practicum are diverse and skilled individuals. They may think they are not powerful speakers, or think things are hopeless, or think they don't know what they want to do with their life, or think they don't fit into world, but they are the fabric of what activism is made of. Every speaker I listened to this week had this in common: they were unique and they want to better the world, just like the women I got to know this week.
The people that make a difference don't look any one way. They aren't white or black or brown or affluent or poor or grassroots or hippies or excitable or dreamers or crazy people. They can be all of these things and they can be none of these things. They are you, if you choose to make efforts to make the world around you a better place.
From seeing the diversity of these other women, I've learned to have more faith in myself. I have learned that I should value what I think and want to see change. At least one person out there will agree with you. And if not, your voice still has value.
This week I've learned that people are generally receptive, so it is okay to voice your opinions, even if it's off-the-wall. I've learned that it is a duty to inform people. You need to tell people when they are misinformed and missing a piece of the puzzle. We all benifit from other's perspectives. I've learned that you don't have to have limmits. Great things come out of creativity and dreaming. I've learned that networking is pretty easy. All you have to do is smile at people and be curious. I've learned simply being a woman does NOT make you an expert on women's issues. I've picked up quite a few tid-bits though.
This whole experience and getting to know all of these amazing and interesting women has been fantastic. I am very honored... and moved. And truely touched. And I really do want world peace!

Thank you everyone for making this week a positive and transformative experience. Everyone here (practicum, L2G, and our leaders Melissa and Kristin) have given me food for thought, laughs, hope, and general happiness.

And I intend to facebook-stalk everyone.

Lots of love and admiration,

Nicole Ronquillo

Post date: Fri, 03/14/2014 - 17:51

Excited, tired, overwhelmed, curious, upset, encouraged, informed, courageous, fierce. I believe these are just some of the words we could use to describe our incredible week at CSW. Throughout the week we have listened and engaged into discussions on critical gender issues. And we have learned more than we could ever imagine.

One word that maybe best describes where we are at right now is: ready. We are ready, not only to listen, but also to speak up.

As a student it is easy to get disillusioned by all the information that you still don't know anything about. We get exposed to new theories and concepts on a daily basis and we keep getting reminded of the fact that our own knowledge is very limited. To some extent this realization is healthy. It keeps me humble about myself and my knowledge. However, despite that my knowledge is limited it is not useless. My history, experience, and education has taken me, has taken all of us, to the point where we are at today. The individual history, experience, and education together creates a very unique perspective that needs to be brought into discussions on women's rights issues.

During this week, I believe that we all have realized that we are more than ready to bring in our own unique perspectives into the discussions on women's rights. Even to the really complex ones. We are ready to proudly present our own expertise but also humbly acknowledge and include the expertise of people around us. Especially of those who often are excluded.

It is impossible to look back at this week without looking forward. We are ready to bring everything we have learned at CSW with us to our own communities. We have grown an inch or two as activists. And we won't stay silent.

Cecilia Wester

Post date: Fri, 03/14/2014 - 14:44

When first hearing about this opportunity to join WILPF at the CSW58, I was ecstatic for the opportunity to expand my knowledge of advocacy from the local, state and national levels to an international context. Currently a master’s student in public health, my previous and current work has focused on civic engagement, higher education, and public health advocacy, and because of this, I am very interested in understanding how systems function and how different sectors engage with one another to move an agenda forward. Through our events and discussions this week, I have learned new advocacy strategies, as well as how both local agents and the great body of the multilateral United Nations interact and provide strength to the advancement of women’s rights and gender equality.

This system is not perfect. We have discussed the shortcomings of entities such as the United Nations or the US Mission: specific communities or issues often left out of the priorities and discussions, lack of expertise or sincerity when addressing the issues, and lack of progress in reaching set goals. We have however seen through our readings and presentations that progress has been made, and there is value to these overarching international policies, laws and conventions. Just as WILPF provides a framework through which women peace builders may connect, engage and find supportive allies; so too can nations and civil society through the United Nations. The opportunity we have been given is to discover how we as advocates may use this system as a tool to the advantage of our efforts.
Through these networks and systems, we are able to provide influence. We are able to work with our communities, listen to and experience struggles and successes, and then share these as part of an arduous, political, and messy dialogue that sets the next agenda. These are strategic interactions, and it is a process that takes, not just one, but many years; but so it is, social change, international development, health equity or progress, however you choose to call it, takes time. Isn’t it exciting?!

It is exciting because we as women are part of the process, and more women are joining each day. We women have a unique set of skills and tendencies; just how Madeleine Rees was described to be last night, we can act with authority and balance that with compassion. We are part of a network of women (and men!) who are also doing this work of advocacy. We push forward through meetings, organizing and action steps and re-energize through conferences, dialogue and reflection. Bosnian women are becoming leaders by sharing their experiences and strategies with fellow Syrian women, and the women of WILPF Colombia gain energy and support from working with WILPF international. Furthermore, through advocacy, women’s rights are protected and advanced as language is changed and inserted into international treaties and development goals.

Thank you for this week and for being a part of the process, the network and system with me!

- Christina Sudduth, WILPF Delegate CSW58

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