NEWS

Post date: Thu, 09/06/2012 - 06:11

By WILPF US ad hoc Bylaws Committee

Sometime this month all WILPF US members should receive a letter, a packet of information. containing a ballot and background information for an all-member vote on three important proposed Bylaws amendments: Direct Member-election of President, Creation of a Board Membership Development Committee and Committee Chair, and Creation of Staggered Elections for Board Members. These three changes are substantial in defining the nature and potential responsiveness of our national board; they are a response to long-standing member advocacy for changes in our structure. Please inform other WILPF members you know—whether at large or branch members—about this important vote and encourage them to participate and to tell us, by their votes where they stand.

The US Board has consensed in support of these three proposals and the national ad hoc Bylwas Committee hopes that you will respond in favor of all three amendments.

More information will become available via the this website (most likely on the Bylaws page). We expect, also, to have a "discussion board" on the website for members to share considerations and opinions about the proposed changes.

Please be sure to review the voting instructions carefully. We seek the broadest possible member involvement in determining the shape of our organization.

If you or other members you're in touch with have suggestions for changes in or additions to the WILPF US Bylaws, please feel free to share them with the ad hoc Bylaws Committee by emailing bylawreview@wilpfus.org.

You should receive your Bylaws ballot materials by Septemeber 20. If you or any WILPF members you may know do not receive them, please inquire with the appropriate branch membership chair to confirm the correctness and currency of membership information. If additional corrections are needed, or if a member is not connected to a branch, please contact WILPF's National Office via ballots@wilpfus.org. (But please work through branch chairs first, if this is an option available to you!)

Post date: Wed, 09/05/2012 - 18:25

Image credit: Jaako Laajava, Finish facilitator of the upcoming Helsinki conference on a Middle East weapons of Mass Destruction Free zone. (December) picture taken in Vienna April 2012

By the Middle East Issue Committee, Odile Hugonot Haber and Barbara Taft, Co-Chairs

Share the following letter with your contacts and use in writing your own letters to the President, Congress and the press. Call the White House today 202-456-1111, TTY/TTD 202-456-6213 to urge restraint and diplomacy instead of threatening to bomb Iran. Middle East Committee co-chair Odile Hugonot Haber traveled to Vienna to distribute and speak about the WILPF US statement supporting a Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone with participating Middle East ambassadors and NGOs at the Non-Proliferation Treaty Prep-Conference. Our letter to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton advancing the MEWMDFZ follows below.

 

Letter to President:

We urge restraint and diplomacy when responding to calls for attacking Iran from the Israeli government and United States Congress. It is clear that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is playing the U.S. presidential candidates against each other, to see who can promise Israel more in blind allegiance and tax-payer financed military aid. Netanyahu’s claims that Iran is “trying to destroy us!” are too reminiscent of claims a decade ago about Iraq. Encouraging such talk is more than fanning the flames of war, it is diverting the money that could support our education, infrastructure and community services and pouring them on certain conflagration of the Middle East.

We are sure you are concerned about US influence in the region. It is definitely waning. A team of senior military officers arrived at the Pentagon for a briefing on January 16, 2010. The team had been dispatched by CENTCOM Commander General David Petraeus. The briefers reported that there was a growing perception among Arab leaders that the US was incapable of standing up to Israel, that CENTCOM’s mostly Arab constituency was losing faith in American promises, that Israeli intransigence on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict was jeopardizing US standing in the region.

An attack on Iran can unleash devastation in the area. The US must not be part of it and you must tell Israel in no uncertain terms that we will not support such an attack. The US must support ongoing discussion and negotiation to solve this potential danger which increases tension among all parties and exacerbates the situation.

 

Letter to Secretary of State:

We, members of the Middle East Issues Committee of the United States Section of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), write you with the goal of totally eliminating nuclear weapons and specifically advancing a Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (MEWMDFZ). We request that you do your utmost to advance the upcoming Helsinki conference on this topic and to insist on the participation of Israel particularly.

We realize that your job is not easy and that you do the best you can in the situation that is given to you. It is hard to know where is the best place to invest energies as so many situations cry out for attention, whether it is the predicament of poor women in Congo or the life of the Syrian people at this time, and the many more such situations. We appreciate the attention that you have drawn to the needs of the Congo women through your recent presence in that country.

One situation that looms over all of us is the danger that nuclear weapons bring to humanity. Not only the hair-trigger alert of the very few minutes in which our President has to decide to respond or not to a nuclear threat but also the fact that so many nations have nuclear weapons and that they are proliferating.

Most developed nations that have nuclear weapons, including the United States, have decided to make their weapons “leaner and meaner” and are modernizing them instead of tearing them down as Nuclear Proliferation Treaty Article 6 prescribes. Reducing, with the goal of totally eliminating, nuclear weapons would be the only wise way to proceed; unfortunately the way our country has chosen to proceed will only bring more and more proliferation of weapons and that is a tragedy for humanity.

Madam Secretary, we appeal to you to work towards creating a MEWMDFZ, specifically as contemplated in the treaty negotiations moving forward toward the Helsinki conference. Please show us the steps that you think would advance working toward such an undertaking, to apply pressure to Israel to negotiate in good faith  to advance participation of this conference and the development of treaties that would further this goal.

The United States of America can and should lead the way to forward agreements such as the MEWMDFZ and as well as to advance peace in this region of the world. What a wonderful legacy to leave to the next generation around the world. We look forward to hearing from you on this matter.

 

US WILPF Statement:

We in the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, U.S. Section (WILPF US) are dismayed by current drumbeats for war and calls for increased sanctions on Iran. This is reminiscent of build up to the Shock and Awe invasion of Iraq in 2003. Fear of nuclear weapons development is again given as the rationale. This time there are major differences and alternatives that could move us toward the global abolition of nuclear weapons. The way will not be easy but is infinitely preferable to the dangerous war that will inevitably be the result of current policies. It is time to lift the sanctionsi,ii and to stop the war talk.iii We need to open the way to future peace and stability in the Middle East. We urge women and men committed to a world of peace, human rights and security for all to participate significantly in coming negotiations.

The Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (WMD FZ)iv, v is a positive alternative to war and military actions for which United Nations (UN) member states have been working through the UN since 1980. At the 2010 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) Review Conference all 187 nations party to that treaty, including the United States, agreed unanimously to hold a high-level conference among the Middle Eastern states to establish a WMD Free Zone. This year, for the first time, it is possible to begin the negotiations on the proposed WMD Free Zone treaty. Helsinki was chosen as the site for this high-level conference (the “2012 Helsinki Conference”) in which all Middle Eastern States are invited to participate. The goal is to ban nuclear, chemical and biological weapons use, production, stationing, stockpiling or transport in the Middle East.

The United States (US) approved the 2012 Helsinki Conference; however, there is little discussion of a diplomatic alternative to military aggression. Almost half the world is already united in nuclear weapons free zones and movements are underway in most of the remaining regions to universalize this approach.

Few realize that Iran, with Egypt’s support, first introduced the Middle East Nuclear Free Zone Resolution to the United Nations in 1974. In 1990 Egypt introduced an expansion of the Resolution to the current Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone, an approach which Iran has continued to support. Many US citizens however do not yet know about nor understand the long history and significance of the proposed WMD Free Zone.vi

While 64% of the Israeli public believe a WMD-Free Zone should exist in the Middle East, the Israeli government disagrees. vii, viii Israel instigated the current furor over development of a nuclear capability by Iran. The only nation in the region possessing nuclear weapons, conservatively estimated at over 200 nuclear warheads, Israel is also the only nation in the region refusing to sign the NPT.

The US government recently allocated $3.075 billion to Israel for military usage,ix up over $75 million from fiscal year 2011. It is purportedly for defensive use, but other nations in the region—both Arab states and non-Arab states such as Iran—perceive it as offensive in nature. Unless there are signs of peace between Israel and the neighboring countries there is little chance that an agenda promoting peace and security in the region will move forward.

Iran regularly submits to the International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA) and other inspections of its nuclear facilities yet receives a steady barrage of threats from Israel. Iran’s domestic nuclear energy program, authorized under the NPT as are those of dozens of other countries, thus far does not appear to IAEA inspectors to have a weapons component. Along with Israel’s refusal to be inspected, the threat of an Israeli attack on Iran is very real. The US government, disregarding reports by nuclear inspectors and relying on accusations made by Israel, has ramped up its verbal attacks, specifically against Iran’s nuclear site at Natanz which Iran has agreed to allow to be inspected.x

The aggressive Israeli and US stance is counter-productive and does not constitute diplomacy. The U.S. should, instead, encourage Israel to cease its threatening language, to make peace with its neighbors and to join other nations in the region to create a zone free of nuclear and all other weapons of mass destruction. Both sides—Israel and Iran—have taken rigid positions, but could benefit from sitting together at the peace table, lowering the level of verbal assaults and reassuring one another of their intentions to maintain peace in the region.

The United States has a responsibility to make the 2012 Helsinki Conference happen and to contribute to a positive outcome. Most of us can recognize as recipes for disaster shortsighted goals of war to secure resources and profits. It is recognized that oil has as much or more to do with the long-escalating enmityxi between Iran and the United States than the threat of currently non-existent nuclear weapons or hyperbolic verbal threats against Israel.

The US, Britain and Russia will be expected to join the conference as depositories of the NPT which has called for this meeting. The US should be able to work closely with all the participants in the 2012 Helsinki Conference.

The way to peace is difficult. We believe it demands more courage and wisdom than the ways of war, death and destruction. We call on everyone to work in the direction of a just peace. Civilians, particularly older people, women and children, are casualties of economic sanctions and military interventions. War brings intolerable suffering on everyone, threatens global ecosystems, and the survival of future generations. WILPF US strongly urges the equal participation of women in the Helsinki Conference and in all decision-making processes related to Middle East peace agreements as mandated in Security Council Resolution 1325.xii


i Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010 (H.R. 2194) at http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-h2194/show

ii See the Iran Toolkit of WILPF’s Reaching Critical Will project on possible unintended consequences within Iran of US sanctions and aggressive posturing toward Iran over its nuclear program (http://www.reachingcriticalwill.org/images/documents/Resources/toolkits/...)

iii WILPF US is an endorser of the United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) “No War on Iran” Statement, 3/15/12. See http://www.unitedforpeace.org/2012/03/15/ufpjs-statement-no-war-on-iran/

iv Originally envisioned as the Middle East Nuclear Free Zone (emphasis added). See material at footnotes 5 and 6

v http://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/mewmdfz

vi http://www.armscontrol.org/factsheets/mewmdfz

vii In an article by Richard Falk, Al Jazeera, of February 2, 2012, “A Nuclear-Free Middle East” published on www.readersupportednews.org, Falk reiterates the results of this poll by Shirley Telhami of Israeli citizens and talks further about the possibility of not just a WMD Free Zone but a Nuclear Free Zone in the Middle East. See http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/289-134/9750-a-nuclear-free-midd.... The New York Times article by Telhami and Kull (January 15, 2012) is here: http://www.unitedforpeace.org/2012/03/15/ufpjs-statement-no-war-on-iran/

viii See Telhami 2011 Public Opinion Poll at http://www.brookings.edu/research/reports/2011/12/01-israel-poll-telhami  reported out by the Brookings Institute; the poll results themselves are here: http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/pdf/dec11/IsraeliMENFZ_Dec11_quai...

ix Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, March/April 2012, p. 31 http://www.wrmea.com/component/content/article/380-2012-march-april/1110...

x WILPF US is an endorser of the Iran Pledge of Resistance campaign. See http://www.iranpledge.org/ for more information and text of the pledge and what situations that would trigger implementation of the promise to take action

xi A succinct but not particularly deep description of this history is offered in a 2009 student newspaper article from the University of Georgia on the topic, here: http://www.redandblack.com/opinion/relationship-between-u-s-and-iran-too.... Independent research can provide many detailed histories of these events with analyses

xii United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 (see text at http://www.un.org/events/res_1325e.pdf) (see analysis and history by WILPF’s PeaceWomen project at http://www.peacewomen.org/themes_theme.php?id=15&subtheme=true)

 

 

Post date: Wed, 09/05/2012 - 13:33

Looking back on August's Nuclear Free Future Month and Looking forward to September Steps Toward Peace

We look back on an active August Nuclear Free Future month. Listen to Ellen Thomas’ song, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Fukishima sung by Courtney Dowe. Hiroshima-Nagasaki reports from Branches are being posted on the UFPJ Nuclear Free Future website. Read the enthusiastic report by Hattie Nestel and Cecile Pineda on their August tour to 11 communities threatened by controversial nuclear reactors in New York, Vermont, Massachusetts and Maine. They will be happy to help you arrange meetings in your own communities where Cecile Pineda can share from her book Devils Tango: How I Learned the Fukishima Step by Step.

In September we continue to move forward in our quest for a Nuclear Free Future, an end to wars and occupations, and dismantling the war economy. On Thursday, September 6, Jean Verthein will represent WILPF at an open UN General Assembly conference on ending all nuclear testing and proceeding to abolition. Remember the D.C. Branch campaign to ban depleted uranium. Read and sign their petition to Hilary Clinton. We will also be planning for Keep Space for Peace week and space demilitarization October 6 to 13. Branch contacts should have already received posters, Space Alert newsletters and action suggestions. Some Branches are already planning to focus on satellite controlled drones. Carol Urner will visit D.C. Branch and deliver KS4P week posters, newsletters and a WILPF letter to Congress and to NGO leaders September 9 to 14. Read more for important additional September events, details and action resources.

A few other dates to remember this September are:
 

September 18-23: Alliance for Nuclear Accountability holds its fall retreat to plan strategies, actions and D.C. lobby days for 2013. Carol Urner will represent WILPF which is a member of the network. Meetings will be in Seattle and include a day in Hanford, the most polluted (and radioactive) site in the western hemisphere. ANA, to which WILPF belongs, will also celebrate its own 25th anniversary.

September 21: United Nations International Day of Peace This year’s theme is a Sustainable Peace for a Sustainable Future and is a wonderful occasion to bring all of our program issues together in one vibrant whole for a Branch or community meeting

September 20-22, Washington D.C.: National Nuclear Free Future Rally in Washington D.C. CAN, the organizing group, is against bombs and the whole nuclear chain, but in this rally will emphasize nuclear power.

Dismantle the War Economy was our focus issue for almost a decade, beginning in 1998, and before that the closely related Women’s budget project. We mustn’t forget those issues. It was good news to learn that Pittsburgh Branch is currently planning their forum on "Cost of War to Pittsburgh", covering various aspects, as part of UNAC commemoration of war anniversary. And WILPF DISARM-End Wars is still pushing the "Nuclear Weapons Abolition  and Economic and Energy Conversion Act," the “WILPF Bill” which would re-direct the money from nuclear weapons to provide carbon-free, nuclear-free energy resources.

We welcome those who again want to cut the military budget and the arms trade as a whole and redirect our spending toward human security. There is grim news on U.S. further militarization of our world.

The New York Times reported August 27 that Overseas weapons sales by the United States totaled $66.3 billion last year, or more than three-quarters of the global arms market, valued at $85.3 billion in 2011. Russia was a distant second, with $4.8 billion in deals.

But we WILPF women, who pride ourselves on our study and analysis of war and peace issues, need to go to the original source, an 85 page document on U.S. dominance in the world arms trade since 2004. The text is only 22 pages and easy to read. The rest is charts and graphs which tell the same story in a variety of visual forms.

So we have plenty of work to do in September and in the months and years ahead. All WILPF women are invited to join us, and we are ready to work with any WILPFer, WILPF Branch or WILPF Issue Committees on our common goals. Contact NFF chairs to reach both Ellen Thomas and Carol Urner, current co-chairs of our DISARM-End Wars Leadership Team.

Image Credit: Image from Keep Space for Peace poster, October 6 to 13, Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space, Co-Sponsored by WILPF, Reaching Critical Will

Post date: Wed, 09/05/2012 - 13:12
Post date: Tue, 09/04/2012 - 11:18

The 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence is an annual global campaign from November 25, International Day Against Violence Against Women, through December 10, International Human Rights Day. The 2012 16 Days Campaign will continue with the global theme, "From Peace in the Home to Peace in the World: Let's Challenge Militarism and End Violence Against Women!" Last year, we had historic participation by WILPF sections. More information will be available soon, but the 2012 Take Action Kit and other relevant materials are available now.

Visit the links below for more information:

Image credit: Roving Flash Mob from Cape Cod Branch's "Blow the Whistle" Actio

 

Post date: Fri, 08/31/2012 - 12:23

Greetings WILPF members!

As lazy August days transform into the hustle of September, our Cape Cod branch met last weekend for its annual retreat at Hawks Nest to plan for a busy programming year ahead. Like other WILPF branches across the country, and indeed around the world, we have political interventions, petitions, educational events, potlucks, parade participation, vigils and more on our plates. We’re energized by our friendships and inspired by WILPF’s mission of total disarmament and peace. I hope you feel that way as well, as WILPF heads into fall.

In this letter:

  • WILPF Launches New Website
  • WILPF National Board Seeks Secretary
  • Farewell to Tanya Henderson and Welcome to New Faces
  • Letter from WILPF's International Treasurer                                  

The long awaited redesign of WILPF’s website is finally here! You’ll now find us at a different URL: www.wilpfus.org. The change of address is part of an international overhaul of WILPF’s web presence; when completed www.wilpf.org will be the gate way to WILPF around the world. For now, please update your homepage and browser to our new address, check out the navigation which we think will promote our goals of transparency and inclusiveness, and participate in one of the on line discussion boards. Let us know what you think about the new design by writing to the national board at dialogue@wilpfus.org.

Do you want to assist national WILPF in establishing smooth functioning through consistent application of policies and ready access to information on prior decisions and procedures? WILPF seeks well organized candidates for the volunteer position of Board Secretary. The Secretary is a full member of the national Board and serves as the primary keeper of organizational records and policies and assures that the WILPF archives contain complete records of current board work. The Secretary can participate fully in the board meeting discussions because her minute taking and record maintenance duties may be facilitated by guidelines, the assistance of an intern and/or temporary recordings of the board meetings. Please see the job description and application for how to apply and further details. Because we seek to fill this opening as soon as possible, only complete application packets received via email by September 21 can be assured consideration.  All inquiries are welcome!

The National board took action on July 29th to fill the vacancies of Program Co-chairs on the National Board and U.S. Section Representatives to the United Nations. We are pleased to welcome Sydney Gliserman (sydney.gliserman@gmail.com) and Ellen Schwartz (ellen@nicetechnology.com) to the board positions and Abigail Ruane and Maryann DeLeo as our UN Reps. Sydney served as administrative intern in the Boston office in 2009 and Abigail is an alumnae of WILPF Practicum in Advocacy at the UN program. We are confident that their combined energies will increase the capacity and impact of our efforts to address the root causes of war and provide realistic, peaceful alternatives.

Sadly, Tanya Henderson resigned from her position as National Director with WILPF on August 10. During her tenure with us, Tanya engaged several new partners and funders, while actively supporting leaders in several branches and WILPF’s seven active issue committees. We are grateful to her for all her successes in raising WILPF’s profile and program in the national arena, as well as for the many new members she personally recruited to WILPF. Tanya has accepted a position with Women's Actions for New Directions, where she will be expanding their political work on SCR 1325, the U.S. NAP, women in Afghanistan, and on gender issues relating to their Disarmament and Pentagon Budget work.  On Sept. 11 she will be presenting a webinar for WAND on “Women as Peace Partners” -- https://www3.gotomeeting.com/register/488113742.  

The next meeting of the WILPF National board will take place in Boston on November 9-11. Board meetings are open to all WILPF members; if you are interested in attending, please contact Ria Kulenovic, Director of Operations, at rkulenovic@wilpfus.org for details. The next meeting of the WILPF International Board (IB) will be February 22-24, 2013, with costs and venue to be announced at a future time.  IB meetings are open to all WILPF members and are good opportunities to learn about what the different Working Groups and Standing Committees are doing.

Please read the recent letter from WILPF’s International Treasurer, Nancy Ramsden, in its entirety. It includes updated instructions for directing gifts to our UN projects and Geneva-based secretariat, as well as information on opportunities for joining the international fundraising committee and otherwise contributing to WILPF’s financial stability and success. Nancy makes some concrete suggestions for how a section like the U.S. might develop a sisterly relationship with one or more of the newer sections in the developing world. The editorial team for UNIDAS, the fledgling WILPF newsletter linking North and South America, is building our consciousness about how our future projects might cross borders. The “sister section” proposal is one that we should consider in a similar light. Please let us know your thoughts by writing to dialogue@wilpfus.org.
 
Happy Blue Moon Wonderful WILPF Women (and Men)!
Sincerely,
Laura Roskos, President U.S. Section

Post date: Fri, 08/31/2012 - 08:36

For a PDF version of this letter, click here.

Date: July 2012

To: International Representatives and Sections

From: Nancy Ramsden, Treasurer

Re: Financial Updates

1. Clarification process for sending donations to International WILPF:



As we are all aware International WILPF includes our two offices, Geneva office and New York UNO office, as well as our projects, PeaceWomen, Reaching Critical Will, Human Rights, any other projects initiated and carried out by International WILPF, and our support to sections for their development,  an area needing larger input. 

Now that the WILPF UNO office in New York is a tax deductible organization in the U. S., the UNO office has become the official financial conduit for donors wishing to have tax deductible status for their donation on their U.S. taxes.  WILPF UNO will now handle all such donations and JAPA will not continue in this role. We appreciate JAPA's work in providing us with this service over the years.

While we are in the process of this transition, if any such donations or bequests should come to JAPA, their  Executive Director will inform UNO staff and then return the donation to the donor, explaining the change and requesting that said donor please make out their check to WILPF and send it to WILPF UNO at 777 United Nations Plaza, 6th floor, New York, New York 10017. Or such donation can be wired directly to the UNO bank account. For bank transfer information or other questions regarding how to donate through the UNO office, please call 1-212-682-1265. Also please let us know if you have a preference regarding the use of your donation. 



To send donations to the Geneva office please go to our International website at www.wilpfinternational.org. Please indicate if you want your donation for sections or any specific area of our work. 
For donations to Peacewomen please go to www.peacewomen.org.

For donations to Reaching Critical Will, please go to www.reachingcriticalwill.org.



2. Fundraising Committee: 



The Standing Finance Committee is seeking members who are willing to be on the newly formed Fundraising Committee. Kirsti Kolthoff, President of the Swedish Section, was recommended by the SFC and appointed to this committee by the Executive Committee, and we are delighted to have this great start. However, we need more members on this committee. The responsibilities for this very important committee can be found at the bottom of this page.

Please let me or any other member of the Standing Finance Committee know if you are interested and willing to be on the Fundraising Committee.



3. Investment expertise needed

:

As WILPF International will now be handling their own investments, we are seeking WILPF members who have some expertise in this area to help establish an investment policy and to advise the Standing Finance Committee and the Executive Committee on the investment of any available funds. Please contact me or any other member of the Standing Finance Committee if you are interested in doing this.

4. Sister Sections 

Over the years some sections have partnered with other sections to assist them in the areas of section fee payments and to collaborate with them in numerous other ways. During the current financial crises in many sections of the world some sections are experiencing problems in their ability to pay their section fees and could use the support of other sections in other ways as well.

If any sections are interested in partnering with another section to support them or if there is any section which could use such support, please contact me at the below e-mail. 

If any sections are now partnered, please tell us about your partnership so that we may all learn from it.



In Peace and Sisterhood,



Nancy Ramsden, Treasurer
, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom


njramsden@aol.com


Skype: peacemaker121212



INTERNATIONAL FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE


The International Fundraising Committee (IFC) works closely with the Standing Finance Committee to:

  • Ensure that a responsible plan is drawn up for securing resources to implement the plans and programs approved by Congress/ IB. Once this has been finalized, the SFC will make the necessary recommendations to the Executive Committee;

  • Ensure the development of, and recommend to the SFC, ethical and effective fundraising policies and procedures;
  • Work closely with fundraisers to ensure that fundraising plans and their implementation are coordinated effectively with the Sections, IB members/etc., where appropriate;

  • Interface and collaborate with any other associations or foundations that may be created in different Sections; Maintain 
ongoing communication with the SFC.

The composition, term of service, committee operation, decision-making, planning, and budgeting modes of the International Fundraising Committee are consistent with those applicable to all Standing Committees.
     
Post date: Sat, 08/25/2012 - 11:17

1. A national WILPF issue committee works on specific issues of concern to our members and consistent with international priorities. Issue committees should:

  • Have a minimum of 5 members, with geographic diversity
  • Set measurable, outcome- oriented goals
  • Develop its own projects to achieve the issue committee goals
  • Welcome any WILPF member who wishes to participate.
  • Encourage Branches with an interest in the committee's issue to have a representative on the committee. This will facilitate sharing of resources as well as cooperation and coordination among Branches.

2. An issue committee in good standing:

  • Submits annual reports in time for fall budgeting cycle to the Program Committee, which will be shared with Board and staff. Reports should include number of members and names; contact person; and evaluation and financial report for year ended and next year's goals, plan and proposed budget.
  • Receives $400 annually in funding from the national budget and is eligible for mini-grant funding.
  • Is listed/linked on www.wilpfus.org homepage
  • Maintains and updates committee web pages
  • Has regular presence in WILPF eNews
  • Has space in hard copy publications such as Peace and Freedom.
  • Has one member participating in the National Program Committee and serving as liaison between that committee and the issue committee.
  • Receives at least minimal support from staff including processing of invoices, quarterly budget reports, web management and list serve management.
  • Prepares semi-annual progress reports for the Board.
  • Processes all income and expenses through the national office including funds raised by the committee outside of the national budget. Good financial procedures should be followed with staff help as necessary.

3. Staff, Program Chair(s) and the Program Committee will offer supports to all Issue Committees and help resolve problems insofar as they are able.

4. Issue Committees in turn will seek to involve interested Branches and members-at-large and share resources with them.

5. An Issue Committee that becomes inactive or fails to fulfill its responsibilities should be offered supports and help in solving problems by the Program Chair(s), Program Committee and/or Staff. However, if inactivity or failure to meet obligations persists, an Issue Committee can become ineligible for funding and official recognition at the recommendation of the Program Committee and with approval of the Board.

6. To create a new Issue Committee (or re-start a previously disbanded Committee):

A group of at least five members, with geographic diversity, will file an application with the program committee.

  • The group will be interviewed by the Program Committee
  • If the issue of concern is consistent with national and international vision, goals and priorities the group will be asked to prepare a report similar to the annual report described above
  • If accepted the Program Chair(s) will send a recommendation to the Board for approval.

We invite WILPF Issue Committees to write policy and position statements that may be released under the Issue Committee’s name so long as they are consistent with WILPF’s stated policies, and we encourage that they be issued in US WILPF’s name after approval by the president is received. All bodies in WILPF are advised to seek consultation with other bodies and knowledgeable people within WILPF when writing statements.

For approval, please send statement to president@wilpfus.org, cc’ing our Program Co-chairs Odile Hugonot Haber, odilehh@gmail.com and Deborah Garretson, gorba336@gmail.com using a clear subject line such as:
“ACT: Statement (or Sign-on) Approval Requested”. Please indicate deadline, if there is one.

Approval will be given within 7 days, or if approval cannot be given, the president will communicate with the authors within 7 days, detailing the problematic points, and offering alternative language if possible. A dialogue between the Issue Committee and Co-Presidents and Program Co-chairs will be pursued in a timely manner until a resolution is reached. While the vast majority of statements can be easily approved, from time to time such serious disagreement may occur that a broader WILPF dialogue may have to be sought, including input from International WILPF.

Post date: Thu, 08/23/2012 - 14:35

The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) is the oldest women's peace organization in the world. It is an international non-governmental organization with over 35 Sections (countries) around the world. WILPF International has offices in Geneva, Switzerland and New York City.



WILPF has had consultative status (category B) with the United Nations through the Economic and Social Council since 1948. We also have Special Consultative Relations with the Food and Agricultural Organisation in Rome, the International Labor Organisation in Geneva, and the United Nations Children's Fund in New York. WILPF is represented at UN headquarters in Geneva, New York and Paris. 


Find out more about our International Organization at www.wilpf.org and follow WILPF on:
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Global Programs

DisarmamentDisarmament
Total and universal disarmament is one of the founding goals of WILPF, and our Disarmament Programme promotes human security and stigmatises the very concept of ‘military security’.
See Reaching Critical Will, the disarmament programme of WILPF International

 

Women, Peace, and SecurityWomen, Peace and Security
WILPF’s Women, Peace and Security Programme ensure that international peace and security efforts work for women.
See PeaceWomen, a space for peacemakers to engage, learn and be part of a global movement to advance a holistic Women, Peace and Security Agenda.

 

Human RightsHuman Rights
The Human Rights Programme supports local women human rights defenders’ engagement with international human rights bodies, and advocates for respect and protection of human rights in order to achieve peace.

 

 

WILPF ManifestoWILPF Manifesto
On April 28, 2015, WILPF International commemorated WILPF’s founding 100 years earlier by publishing the WILPF Manifesto. The Manifesto celebrates our survival, our persistence and our undiminished commitment to the ideal that brought us into being — universal and enduring peace with justice and freedom. We seized that centenary moment to reaffirm the principles and purposes of our founders – as relevant today as ever they were, to set out our current concerns and tasks, and to foresee the challenges ahead in the century to come.

We are determined that WILPF shall grow and become more effective. We will engage, mobilize, and amplify the energies of women worldwide – to do away with militarism as mindset, militarization as process, and war as practice. It’s time to shake the foundations and topple the structures of power that foster these destructive manifestations: capitalism and its class system, patriarchy with its gender hierarchy, and nationalism and racism with their racist ranking of diverse peoples. We will continue to struggle to achieve full participation as women in all our communities, states and international organizations. We seek to liberate women's power to stop war.
 

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