NEWS

Post date: Sat, 08/11/2012 - 08:09

By Carol Urner, DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

 

August's Nuclear Free Future month opened with WILPF women across the country recommitting themselves to work for a Nuclear Free Future. Send your August NFF news to carol.disarm@gmail.com.

Ashland, OR and St. Louis, MO WILPF Branches were both chief sponsors of community remembrances of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Ashland WILPF organized a four-day series of events ending with floating sunflowers. Pittsburgh also participated in a long series of events as did Washington D.C. WILPF, ending with a prayer vigil at the White House. Sacramento Valley WILPF was co-sponsor of their Hiroshima Day memorial as was Portland, OR Branch of their 50th citywide community remembrance.

Boston and Cape Cod Branches sponsored community meetings with Cecile Pineda and Hattie Nestel, discussing Cecile’s powerful new book, Devil’s Tango: How I learned the Fukishima Step by StepDISARM is helping our members Hattie and Cecile do ten book signings in communities seeking to shut down nearby nuclear reactors in Massachusetts, New York, Vermont and New Hampshire.

The wide variety of grassroots and national  peace groups (including Peace Action, AFSC, Western States Legal Foundation and WILPF) that organize together within the UFPJ Nuclear Weapons and Human Security Working Group facilitated by Jackie Cabasso, regard August as Nuclear Free Future month. After Hiroshima and Nagasaki Day commemorations, and our renewed pledge to work for a Nuclear Free Future, our Congressional delegations will be home and campaigning. I-Can has just issued a new booklet on 'Catastrophic Humanitarian Harm' that examines the catastrophic effects of nuclear weapons and the whole nuclear chain on our health, societies and the environment. View and download the entire document. for meetings with your Senators and Representative, or print out individual half pages to share.

August is often a difficult month for organizing events but can be a good month for planning future ones. Refer to our DISARM Nuclear Free Future Resources in the July eNews for program and action project resources on Depleted Uranium, Mayors for Peace Cities, and phasing out nuclear power.

And watch for our updated web page later this month with a report on WILPF participation in Hiroshima-Nagasaki observances and a list of DVDs that could and should be shown in high school and college classrooms everywhere.

Post date: Fri, 08/10/2012 - 10:47

Current Issue

Spring/Summer 2024 | vol 84, No. 1
This issue of Peace & Freedom was published in digital only.

Click here to view PDF as "turnable pages" using Yumpu.
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Peace & Freedom

This issue is focused on what we need to challenge and change in our current economic systems and structures so we can have a “solidarity economy” that cares for all people and the planet. Articles include Rickey Gard Diamond on the “financialization” of our economy and how this relates to violence and authoritarianism, Rev. Rowan Fairgrove on poverty as a risk factor for death, Angela Priestley on climate action and investing in the care economy, and Tina D. Shelton and Adrian Bernal on the election-year myths being propagated about immigration and the increasing militarization of our borders.

 

Contents

  • Water on the Frontlines for Peace: Agency, Advocacy, Action
  • Register Now for the WILPF US Congress
  • The Lloyd Family Legacy Campaign Launches at WILPF US!
  • Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing
  • Women Investing for Change
  • Letters to the President
  • Poverty = Death: Join the PPC March on June 29
  • What’s Money Got to Do with It?
  • Care Jobs Are Green Jobs
  • Worker Co-ops Build a Solidarity Economy
  • Bringing Feminist Peacemaking to Immigration Debates
  • Now’s the Time for a Major Woman-led Peace Movement
  • COP Report: Rising Resistance and Demands for a Change of Course
  • Reflections on War and Peace at COP 28
  • MacGregor Eddy: Tireless Witness against War
  • Summer Reading List
  • Treasurer’s Report to Members
  • Branches Show Solidarity Locally and Globally
  • Life Happens: Be a Sustainer

Fall/Winter 2023 | vol 83, No. 2
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Peace & Freedom

The cover of this issue of Peace & Freedom shows “wish ribbons for peace” that Koreans have pinned on the barbed wire fence at the DMZ. The authors within show how WILPFers do more than wish for peace, they work for it in a multitude of ways. Protesting and picketing are important ways to advocate for a better world, but WILPF members also educate and inform themselves. An equally important element of peacemaking involves sharing knowledge of the history, politics, and economics that drive war and conflict.

 

Contents

  • Working in a Fire Zone by Darien De Lu
  • Seventy Years Is Enough: End the Korean War! by Gwyn Kirk
  • The Middle East, North Africa, and Afghanistan by Valentine M. Moghadam
  • What Leads to a Sustainable Peace? by Linda Belle
  • Azerbaijan, Gaza, and Ukraine Are All Connected by Charlotte Dennett
  • DC-Maryland-Virginia Branch Builds Capacity by Tara Vassefi
  • Des Moines Branch Promotes “No Mow May” by Janice Hawkins
  • The Fearless Four by Robin Lloyd
  • Now’s the Time to End Violence against Women and Girls by Lois A. Herman
  • Why Domestic Violence Matters by April Rumery
  • BIPOC Survivors Need Self-Determination by Rita Gonzalez
  • WILPF Rises to the Challenge: Warheads to Windmills by Vicki Elson
  • Artificial Intelligence and War by Eileen Kurkoski and Margo Schulter
  • CSW Practicum Now Open to Young Activists by Shilpa Pandey
  • “First They Came…”: Standing in Solidarity with Activists Under Attack by Leni Villagomez Reeves
  • Yvonne Simmons, a Voice for Peace in Portland and the Balkans by Mary Rose, Karen James, Dan Handelman, & Desiree Hellegers
  • Ying Lee, Berkeley City Council Member and Lifelong Anti-War Activist 
  • Carol Urner, Tireless Advocate for Disarmament by Kirby Urner and Ellen Thomas
  • Branches Find Many Ways to Advocate for Peace
  • Tomorrow’s Gift, Today’s Work

Spring/Summer 2023 | vol 83, No. 1
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Peace & Freedom

This issue focuses on the interlinking issues of climate crisis, militarism, and an unjust global economy. These realities are leading to unique challenges for women, and they are disproportionately impacting women in the Global South. As Earth Democracy Chair Nancy Price writes her introduction, the authors in this issue “detail clearly how much war costs us, destroying lives and communities, diverting funds that could be used to address climate change and its effects, and ravaging the planet. At the same time, they offer us multiple opportunities to educate ourselves and others, and provide actions that can be taken by issue committees, branches, and members.” Put this issue on your summer reading list and come away with a WILPF-specific understanding of the environmental crisis facing humankind right now.

  Contents
  • Connecting, Working Together, Taking Action by Darien De Lu
  • How We Can Advance Environmental Justice by Nancy Price
  • A Human Rights Crisis for Global South Women by Edwick Madzimure
  • Climate Collateral by Nick Buxton
  • Peace on the Seas by Tamara Lorincz
  • WILPF’s International Environment Working Group
  • WILPF Delegation Impacts Conversation at COP27 by Cindy Piester
  • Tarea Vida (Life Task) – Cuba’s Climate Plan of Action by Cindy Domingo
  • A Conversation with Mazin Qumsiyeh
  • Third Session on WMD Free Zone in Middle East by Odile Hugonot Haber
  • Climate Change Worsens Gender-Based Violence by Jenaina Irani
  • Spreading the Gospel of Solar Energy by H Patricia Hynes
  • Public Banking as a Tool for Green Transition by Marybeth Gardam and Nancy Price
  • Summer Reading List by Nancy Price
  • Meet New Development Chair Martha Collins by Marybeth Gardam
  • Treasurer’s Report to Members by Jan Corderman
  • Thank You WILPF US Donors
  • In Memoriam: Mildred “Millee” Livingston by Ellen Schwartz
  • Branches Press for Disarmament and Environmental Justice
  • Not to Be Forgotten: Donate in Memory of WILPF US Women!

Fall/Winter 2022 | vol 82, No. 2
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Peace & Freedom

This issue covers a wide range of the important work WILPF US is doing in the world to advance peace and justice and to care for humanity and the earth. Whether it’s a new issue committee on domestic violence, an eye-opening trip to Cuba, WILPF’s many unique projects and collaborations happening around PFAS, or smart and comprehensive analyses of sanctions and of the abortion rights struggle, the authors here combine reflection and action. Also included is a summary of what went on at the 33rd International Congress in July. Dig in as soon as you can – many articles are better read before the November midterms!

  Contents
  • How We Can Move Beyond by Darien De Lu
  • Can Sanctions Ever Be Just — Let Alone Effective? By Patricia Hynes
  • The Cuban People Remain Inspiring By Leni Villagomez Reeves
  • A Memorable First Trip to Cuba By “Dr. Jean” Kennedy
  • WILPF’s Unique PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ Programs By Marguerite Adelman and Nancy Price
  • New DPoW Committee Has a Three-Year Plan By Deanna Murphy
  • 33rd International WILPF Congress By Deanna “Dee” Murphy, Cindy Piester, and Robin Lloyd
  • W$D Learning Circles Revive Public Banking Activism By Marybeth Gardam
  • Reaching Underrepresented Voters to Get Out The Vote By Judy Adams
  • The Death of Abortion Rights Signals a Threat to Democracy By Laura Dewey
  • Dr. Bernice King: ‘Poverty in All of its Forms Is Violence’ By Jan Corderman
  • Many Issues Are Covered by the AHR Committee By Donna Pihl
  • Fundraising and Serendipity? By Mary Hanson Harrison
  • Stronger Branches, Stronger WILPF By Shilpa Pandey
  • Edith Bell, a Lifelong Activist with Boundless Energy By Susan M. Smith and Mary King
  • Miriam Thompson, Changemaker and Movement Mentor By Lucy Lewis
  • Marge Van Cleef, Renaissance Woman and Teacher By Tina Shelton
  • Branches Show Up for Peace and Justice
  • Living and Leaving a Legacy of Pacifism
     

Spring/Summer 2022 | vol 82, No. 1
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Peace & Freedom

This issue’s overarching theme is “Listen to Women for a Change,” and the voices here are worth listening to. These wise authors tackle racism, gun violence, poverty, and voting rights. They alert us to the dangers of militarism and bring to life important histories. After you read this issue, you will understand why the original 1915 Women’s International Conference at The Hague and the long struggle for voting rights are still relevant to our peace and justice activism today. 

  Contents
  • Fewer Words, Our Actions by Darien De Lu
  • 10,000 Miles Apart but Connected by Our Activism by Shilpa Pandey
  • Technology – the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly by Eileen Kurkoski
  • Be Part of History: Attend WILPF’s 33rd International Congress by Janet Slagter
  • Dr. Jean Facilitates Fresno “Unpacking Racism” Group
  • Detroit Branch Hosts Forum on Gun Violence
  • Supporting from the Shadows: Voting Rights and the Incredible Power of Women by Ashley Carrington
  • ‘If We Truly Want Peace, We Have to Work for Justice’ by Emily Keel
  • Listening to “The Hague Women” of 1915 by Gloria McMillan
  • Middle East Regimes Becoming More Despotic by Odile Hugonot Haber
  • Threads of Hope Amidst Deepening Crises by Nancy Price
  • Summer Reading List
  • Treasurer’s Report to Members by Jan Corderman
  • Donors Plant Seeds of Peace
  • Remembering Joan Ecklein: Peacemaker, Storyteller, Traveler
  • Many Methods, Common Goals: Branches Rally for Peace

Fall 2021/vol 81, No. 2
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Peace & Freedom

The pandemic continues into a second year, impacting each of us as well as our ongoing work for collective justice; amidst the challenges and fatigue of these times, WILPF members and branches have remained engaged, thoughtful, and committed. As WILPF US President, Darien De Lu writes in her column in this issue, “the community and principles of WILPF...help give us the strength and courage to take risks and be boldly loving – in our political work and our lives.”

  Contents
  • Dr. Rev. Liz Theoharis and Dr. Vandana Shiva give rousing keynote speeches on the moral urgency of our times and the call for resilience, strength, and integrity.
  • Members of the WILPF Triangle and WILPF Des Moines branches explain the dangers of Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) and the effects of our food choices on larger systems of planetary health.
  • Nettie Weibe recaps a Congress presentation on a feminist approach to the UN Food Summit and the challenges posed by its new, multi-stakeholder structure. 
  • Maude Barlow and Mary Grant show how Blue Communities organize to resist the privatization of water in cities and towns across the world, and how you can participate. 
  • Tina Cordova’s personal story of the effects of fallout from nuclear testing  urges accountability through the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act.
  • Charlotte Dennett traces how the creation of pipelines in the Middle East contributed to ongoing war in the region.
  • Ingeborg Breines, renowned peace educator and activist, shares reflections on healing international relations between neighboring Nordic countries.
  • Paul Kivel, author and educator, offers actionable resources for dismantling white supremacy offered. 
  • On our back cover, look for info about the link between climate change & militarization from the Disarm/End Wars Committee. 

Winter/Spring 2021/vol 81, No. 1
Note: This issue was published as a digital version only.

Click here to view PDF as "turnable pages" using Yumpu.
Click here for a traditional PDF file.

Peace & Freedom

This issue is packed with articles on themes important to the WILPF community including a report from Vicky Elson from the Disarm/End Wars Committee, a new feminist foreign policy by Val Maghadam, an in-depth look at the struggle in Colombia by Leni Villagomez Reeves, the misery brought about by the separation wall in Israel/Palestine by Odile Hugonot Haber, and many other articles that provide important insights about progressive movements.

  Contents
  • Hope, Despair, Reality – and Inspiration from a People’s Victory
  • Feeding Two Birds with One Scone: Converting Warheads to Windmills
  • Iran and the United States: What Might a Feminist Foreign Policy Look Like?
  • In Colombia, the Struggle Continues
  • Border Walls Bring Misery and Discrimination
  • The Roots of Separation, or How Walls Develop
  • Sameena Nazir on Women’s Rights and the Desire for Peace in Pakistan
  • Money Creation Is a Form of Violence
  • Paper Crane Exhibit Takes Flight in Menlo Park
  • A Pandemic Within the Pandemic
  • Friend-Raising at WILPF US Has Come a Long Way
  • A Virtual Tour of the WILPF US Office!
  • Rabbi Hirsch’s Neighborhood in Winter: Jane Addams and Hull-House’s Early Years
  • Remembering Vivian Schatz: Lifelong Peace Activist and Environmentalist
  • Branches Get Innovative: Activism Takes New Forms
  • Zooming ahead: WILPF US 34th Triennnial Congress

Spring/Summer 2020/vol 80, No. 1

From COVID-19 reflections, to international collaborations for disarmament and peace, to calls for racial, economic, and environmental justice in the US, the articles in the Spring/Summer 2020 issue challenge, inspire, and explore the intersectional, interlocking issues for which WILPF US has long been known.

  Contents
  • Look to the Persistence of Resistance 
  • COVID-19 Is Shining a Spotlight on Racial Inequality
  • Why Challenging Nuclear Madness and Militarism Begins in Hawai’i
  • Messengers of Peace
  • Then & Now: Disarmament Petition Campaigns
  • WILPF Recordings & Films in Swarthmore Peace Collection
  • Women Lead Cuba Solidarity Activism
  • How Twitter Can Grow Activist Movements
  • An Economy of Our Own Shares Women’s Ways of Knowing
  • Nancy Price Thirsts for Climate Justice and Peace
  • Living and Dying in Paradox
  • Migrants Increasingly Fleeing Climate Crisis
  • Donors Plant Seeds of Peace
  • Treasurer’s Report to Members
  • Leaving a Legacy
  • Yoshiko Ikuta: A Dangerous Woman
  • In Memoriam
  • Branches Organize, Educate, and Demonstrate
  • Legacy S-heroes Keep WILPF Sustainable

Click on the publication images to download the PDF of Peace & Freedom.
An index for the years 2000 through 2015 (volumes 60-75) is available as a PDF.

Queries and submissions for Peace and Freedom should be sent to editor@wilpfus.org

Peace & Freedom

Spring/Summer 2018

Peace & Freedom

Winter/Spring 2019

Peace & Freedom

Spring/Summer 2017

Fall/Winter 2017

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Spring/Summer 2016

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Fall/Winter 2016

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Spring/Summer 2015

Fall/Winter 2015

Fall/Winter 2014

Spring/Summer 2014

Fall/Winter 2013

Spring 2013

Fall 2012

Spring 2012

Fall 2011

Spring 2011

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Spring 2010

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Spring 2009

Fall 2008

Winter 2008

Spring 2008

Fall 2007

Spring 2007

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Spring 2006

For Peace and Freedom Archives (2005 and earlier) click here.

Post date: Fri, 08/10/2012 - 10:17

Download the new Earth Democracy Fracking Fact Sheet in color here.

Download the new Earth Democracy Fracking Fact Sheet in Grayscale here.

 

Start now to plan a dynamic community action for September 22.

On September 22, WILPF and Earth Democracy joins the growing coalition in the Global Frackdown Day of Action calling for a global BAN on fracking.

Join this growing and powerful people’s movement to ban fracking not just in the U.S., but world-wide. This is one big step toward environmental and climate justice that will help secure national and international peace and freedom now and for future generations.

WILPF is one of many hundreds of partner endorsing organizations. 

Sign on here as a WILPF Branch or as an individual.

As a partner organization, we’ll have the opportunity to:

  • Have events featured on the Global Frackdown www.globalfrackdown.org website with a link to WILPF and each scheduled event
  • Increase media attention locally by tying the local event to the global day of action
  • Have sample materials for use on the day of action, including: a media advisory template, events page to track registrations, and editable flyers
  • Create a powerful counter-narrative to the “dirty” energy industry’s PR by having coordinated, unified actions across the world.

Start now to plan a dynamic community action for September 22.

Plan a September 22 Event Now:

This could be a film screening, a potluck where participants can take photos with signs opposing fracking, a petition-signing to send to local and state legislators, or higher visibility events like constructing a fracking rig in a public space, coming together to make a human sign…just use your imagination. We’ll post your event to the AfD website.

Have a house party and show Gasland the award-winning documentary by Josh Fox. By the DVD on Amazon and use this Home Screening Tool Kit.

As WILPF Branches and members, go beyond just this call to ban fracking by promoting solutions like Oregonians for Renewable Energy: OREP and their proposals to use of German-style Feed-In Tariffs to jump start locally produced renewable and job creation at the same time. Print out OREP’s “Democratizing the Grid: A Sustainable Energy Future for Oregon” brochure and distribute at you local September 22 event.

Educate your community on the impact of “dirty fuels” on the environment, public health, and global warming, and the renewable energy alternative now being pioneered by OREP, by requesting that your local public access TV station play these interview programs of leading activists on Populist Dialogues.

This Global Frackdown is to bring international attention to the oil and gas industry’s pro-fracking propaganda. Natural gas fracking IS NOT the transitional path to renewable energy. And, with U.S. consumption down due to conservation, fuel-efficient vehicles, a glut of natural gas that has reduced profits in the U.S., the rush to increase natural gas production in the U.S. is not for “energy independence,” but for export requiring thousands of miles of new pipe and rail lines to the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific with huge terminal complexes planned for WA and OR. Why subsidize “dirty” oil, gas and coal? Why not subsidize a sustained transition to true, green renewable energy, now?

In this “Viewpoint” web exclusive, Josh Fox, environmental activist and director of “Gasland," talks about fracking and his new “emergency film,” The Sky is Pink about the impact of fracking on NY state, where Gov. Andrew Cuomo is considering allowing fracking in just a few counties.

Suggested reading:

 

Post date: Fri, 08/10/2012 - 09:58

By Marybeth Gardam, Chair, Corporations vs Democracy Issue Committee in Collaboration with the Food Democracy/Local Economy Subcommittee of the Earth Democracy Issue Committee

Members and branches are asked to complete this survey (print and mail) or complete it online and return it on or before August 15, 2012

The Corporations vs Democracy Working Group and the Food Democracy/Local Economy subcommittee of the Earth Democracy Committee have prepared an informational introduction to Monsanto Corporation’s ‘crimes’ against the environment, food security, human rights and democracy. Other national organizations have pledged to confront the giant multi-faceted corporate giant, including FOOD DEMOCRACY, NATION OF CHANGE, and MILLIONS AGAINST MONSANTO. WILPF has limited resources but this article suggests ways in which members and branches could have broad impact, even without a lot of resources.

Post date: Fri, 08/10/2012 - 09:58
Post date: Fri, 08/10/2012 - 09:20

 

Start now to plan a dynamic community action for September 22.

On September 22 - WILPF and Earth Democracy joins the growing coalition in the Global Frackdown Day of Action calling for a global BAN on fracking.

Join this growing and powerful people’s movement to ban fracking not just in the U.S., but world-wide. This is one big step toward environmental and climate justice that will help secure national and international peace and freedom now and for future generations.

WILPF is one of many hundreds of partner endorsing organizations. 

Sign on here as a WILPF Branch or as an individual.

As a partner organization, we’ll have the opportunity to:

  • Have events featured on the Global Frackdown www.globalfrackdown.org website with a link to WILPF and each scheduled event
  • Increase media attention locally by tying the local event to the global day of action
  • Have sample materials for use on the day of action, including: a media advisory template, events page to track registrations, and editable flyers
  • Create a powerful counter-narrative to the “dirty” energy industry’s PR by having coordinated, unified actions across the world.

Start now to plan a dynamic community action for September 22.

Plan a September 22 Event Now:

This could be a film screening, a potluck where participants can take photos with signs opposing fracking, a petition-signing to send to local and state legislators, or higher visibility events like constructing a fracking rig in a public space, coming together to make a human sign…just use your imagination. We’ll post your event to the AfD website.

Have a house party and show Gasland the award-winning documentary by Josh Fox. By the DVD on Amazon and use this Home Screening Tool Kit.

As WILPF Branches and members, go beyond just this call to ban fracking by promoting solutions like Oregonians for Renewable Energy: OREP and their proposals to use of German-style Feed-In Tariffs to jump start locally produced renewable and job creation at the same time. Print out OREP’s “Democratizing the Grid: A Sustainable Energy Future for Oregon” brochure and distribute at you local September 22 event.

Educate your community on the impact of “dirty fuels” on the environment, public health, and global warming, and the renewable energy alternative now being pioneered by OREP, by requesting that your local public access TV station play these interview programs of leading activists on Populist Dialogues.

This Global Frackdown is to bring international attention to the oil and gas industry’s pro-fracking propaganda. Natural gas fracking IS NOT the transitional path to renewable energy. And, with U.S. consumption down due to conservation, fuel-efficient vehicles, a glut of natural gas that has reduced profits in the U.S., the rush to increase natural gas production in the U.S. is not for “energy independence,” but for export requiring thousands of miles of new pipe and rail lines to the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific with huge terminal complexes planned for WA and OR. Why subsidize “dirty” oil, gas and coal? Why not subsidize a sustained transition to true, green renewable energy, now?

In this “Viewpoint” web exclusive, Josh Fox, environmental activist and director of “Gasland," talks about fracking and his new “emergency film,” The Sky is Pink about the impact of fracking on NY state, where Gov. Andrew Cuomo is considering allowing fracking in just a few counties.

Suggested reading:

 

Post date: Fri, 08/10/2012 - 09:13

Download Generations of Courage, a 16-page booklet on the history of WILPF.

WILPF was founded in 1915 during World War I, with Jane Addams as its first president. WILPF works to achieve through peaceful means world disarmament, full rights for women, racial and economic justice, an end to all forms of violence, and to establish those political, social, and psychological conditions which can assure peace, freedom, and justice for all.

WILPF works to create an environment of political, economic, social and psychological freedom for all members of the human community, so that true peace can be enjoyed by all.

On April 28, 1915, a unique group of women met in an International Congress in The Hague, Netherlands to protest against World War I, then raging in Europe, to suggest ways to end it and to prevent war in the future. The organizers of the Congress were prominent women in the International Suffrage Alliance, who saw the connection between their struggle for equal rights and the struggle for peace. WILPF's foremothers rejected the theory that war was inevitable and defied all obstacles to their plan to meet together in wartime. They assembled more than 1,000 women from warring and neutral nations to work out a plan to end WWI and lay the basis for a permanent peace. Out of this meeting the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom was born.

Jane AddamsWILPF's first International President was Jane Addams, founder of Hull House in Chicago and the first U.S. woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.

Read more about Jane Addams, WILPF's founder, on the Nobel Prize website.

It was the wisdom of our founding foremothers in 1915 that peace is not rooted only in treaties between great powers or a turning away of weapons alone, but can only flourish when it is also planted in the soil of justice, freedom, non-violence, opportunity and equality for all. They understood, and WILPF still organizes in the understanding, that all the problems that lead countries to domestic and international violence are all connected and all need to be solved in order to achieve sustainable peace.

This remarkable vision still guides us today as we face the challenges of the twenty-first century. In today's context this means

  • the equality of all people in a world free of sexism, racism, classism, and homophobia,
  • the guarantee of fundamental human rights including the right to sustainable development,
  • an end to all forms of violence: rape, battering, exploitation, intervention and war,
  • the transfer of world resources from military to human needs, leading to economic justice within and among nations, and
  • world disarmament and peaceful resolution of international conflicts via the United Nations.

WILPF celebrated 100 years in 2015 with a Congress at the Hague to celebrate! Check out this article for a perspective on that amazing event.

 

Post date: Wed, 08/08/2012 - 07:58

How Branches Work in WILPF

WILPF US encourages individual members to seek out their local branch in the Branch Directory below. (If there is no branch near you, you are welcomed as an at-large member, and you can engage in your local community with other activists to pursue WILPF programs and actions. Also, you can join our nationwide virtual branch, the Jane Addams Branch. Contact the Membership Development Chair (see the current Board of Directors listing for contact info) to find out more about the Jane Addams Branch.) 

Branches democratically choose their leaders, maintain communications with national WILPF, and operate locally in the name of WILPF, featuring the WILPF US logo and name prominently in their documents and signage. See more information in our six guidelines and recommendations for Model WILPF Branch Procedures.

In a branch, members meet regularly, forming working relationships and friendships. Branches center their meetings and local events and actions on WILPF issue committee activities and campaigns, as well as on other WILPF initiatives and issues. At the same time, with co-sponsored and coalition activities, branches ally with other organizations for greater effectiveness.

Forming a Branch

WILPF members can organize a branch in their community by involving at least ten current, local WILPF members. (See above for how to contact the Membership Development Chair for more information.)

Branch Directory
See the map and/or lists below to locate current branches and contact information for them. 

View or download Branch list as PDF file here.
Download Branch list as Excel file here.
If you are unable to download the Excel file, please contact Chris Wilbeck at info@wilpfus.org.

Please note: If you reach out to a branch contact, but you do not get a response a week after your second inquiry, please email Info@wilpfus.org for further assistance.

Post date: Tue, 08/07/2012 - 22:55

Subcommittees of the WILPF US Advancing Human Rights Issues Committee work to enhance respect and actions for human rights at the federal, state and local levels, working with other organizations. WILPF US members are welcome to join AHR and any of its subcommittees. During the 2021-2022 phase of the committee's history, the following subcommittees have been meeting separately, virtually.

  • Border and Migration Justice
  • Ending Mass Incarceration and the Death Penalty (EMIDP)
  • Racial Justice (currently inactive)
  • United Nations for Women (UN 4 Women)
  • United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent / Reparations (UN Decade / Reparations)

WILPF International Resolution on the Decade for People of African Descent and the Related AHR Subcommittee

The 2022 International WILPF Congress adopted several resolutions, including one on the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent. 

See this 2022 WILPF International resolution, “Supporting the International Decade for People of African Descent" here. In addition to those on the African continent, many millions of people of African descent live in other parts of the world. They constitute a distinct group whose human rights are often violated. 

In WILPF, we can work for the promotion and protection of these rights, as called for in the WILPF resolution. WILPF members and branches can support this resolution by taking local actions in support, including the actions described in it. 

To work on the national WILPF level on this resolution, contact the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent / Reparations Subcommittee by sending a clear message to Donna Pihl at AHRchair@wilpfus.org 
 

Renters' Bill of Rights

Renter Bill of Rights

Click here to download the Renters's Bill of Rights

 

Contact AHR:

To contact specific subcommittees, to join the AHR Issues Committee, and/or for more information, send a clear message to Theresa El-Amin at AHRchair@wilpfus.org 

 

 

 

Post date: Sun, 08/05/2012 - 08:34

Operating since the 1990s, the Women, Money & Democracy (W$D) Issue Committee educates and activates on issues of unchecked corporate power and big money as a threat to self-governance, individual rights, and free speech in the US and around the world.  

Our work gives women a voice in creating a democracy that works for all Americans and an economy based on the values we hold but are constantly told we can't afford. (Funny how there's always money for more war.)

In W$D you'll find

  • Women like you, who want system change and are willing to work for it.
  • A path to leadership for introducing projects and strategies.
  • Organizing tools and the chance to create them.
  • Strategies to engage the public.
  • Short and long term projects that invite your participation and leadership.

WHO WE ARE

The W$D Committee includes WILPF members from across the US, united in their commitment towards the goal of this committee and the larger goals of WILPF US.

We envision a vibrant participatory democracy where the common good of the people is prioritized above profiteering and consolidation of power.  

HOW WE WORK

Using an informal feminist model of democratic leadership, we meet monthly on the 3rd Tuesday of each month at 8:30 pm ET/7:30 pm C/5:30 pm PT

To learn more about how we work or to join us, contact our current Chair Marybeth Gardam: mbgardamATgmail.com.

COMMITTEE PRIORITIES

  • Educate and raise awareness about the threat to democracy from run-away inequality, economic injustice, and the consolidation of money and power in the top 1% of our country.  
  • Raise practical solutions that can protect a vibrant democracy and ensure that the voice and values of the people guide our government. Our US solutions must be determined without the influence of huge US donors and dark money from foreign countries.  
  • Create an awareness among women about their role in our rigged economy. 
  • Lift up feminist solutions for system change from the bottom up; work to put pressure on our federal representatives. 
  • Prioritize leadership and training among WILPF members, through a feminist model of democratic leadership. The work of our committee towards system change is informal but serious.    

CURRENT PROJECTS
Jump right in!

Corporate Personhood
The Legal Fiction that Corporations Are People 

Corporate personhood is the legal fiction that a corporation, separately from its associated human beings, has at least some of the legal rights and responsibilities enjoyed by natural persons.

How do we untangle the knot of special interests, corruption and laws?

WILPF has a long and esteemed reputation for its early work to inform and organize the public about the illegitimacy and threats to democracy of rising corporate power and the legal fiction of ‘corporate personhood’.   The illegitimacy of rising unchecked corporate power and the influence of ‘political speech’ as political donations (graft) threatens democracy

Here are some of the tools we developed to make a strong case against corporate theft of our individual Constitutional rights and many corrupt Supreme Court decisions that sold off our democracy.   

THE CORPORATE STUDY COURSE: Challenge Corporate Power: Assert The People’s Rights
A 10-session course designed for use in small discussion groups. Rich with discussion, resources and exercises to elicit engagement.  A history lesson and much more.

THE TIMELINE OF (illegitimate) CORPORATE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
This timeline documents by date and subject each Supreme Court case that sold off the Constitutional rights of individuals.  It reveals the intentional pattern, hidden in plain view, over many decades.

USING ART TO ENTERTAIN & EDUCATE - DRAMAS YOU CAN MOUNT in your own community. 
These plays by WILPF members Jim Allison are illuminating, entertaining and easy to perform as dramas or public readings.  They make their points through humor as well as carefully researched facts.  The history of corporate power comes alive, along with the conspiracy to steal Constitutional rights.   

THE POWELL MANIFESTO
Corporate attorney (later Supreme Court Justice) Lewis Powell wrote this “roadmap” in 1971 on behalf of the US Chamber of Commerce.  It blatantly lays out the plan for all the corporate capture tactics corporations have pursued in the 50 years since it’s publication.  These strategies have affected every level of US society and culture, and we continue to see the damage from this stunning corporate assault on democracy.   

Allies Working on These Issues

MOVE TO AMEND does vital work promoting the We The People Amendment.
See the progress they’ve made.  In May 2021 Move To Amend reintroduced the joint resolution to Congress to amend the Constitution to affirm that corporations are not people, money is not speech, and campaign finance can be regulated on the federal, state and local levels.  Engage in their citizen advocacy. 

REPRESENTus.org State-by-state citizen lobbying for the
Powerful shareable videos explain the ways our Democracy is broken. Join state-by-state citizen lobbying for the Anti-Corruption Act to support their work in local communities across the US.

BOLD ReTHINK is developing a plan to use ‘The Law of the Commons’, existing laws to curtail corporate power from further damaging the planet.

ULTIMATE CIVICS curriculums that bring civics classes to life with the truth about democracy. 

ALLIANCE FOR DEMOCRACY working on voter protections, gerrymandering, globalization, trade policy inequities and voter education.  Check out back issues of their wonderful online magazine “Justice Rising”.

CENTER FOR MEDIA & DEMOCRACY/PR WATCH champions investigative media watchdogs spotting and reporting on corruption in US media and politics.

PROGRAM ON CORPORATIONS, LAW & DEMOCRACY (POCLAD) our ‘grandparent’ organization for challenging abuse of corporate power.  Led in the early days by Richard S. Grossman and Ward Morehouse, giants in the field of corporate accountability.

OCCRP - Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, a consortium of investigative centers, media and journalists operating in Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, Central Asia and Central America — with MANY connections to US politics, including budgeting and dark money interests.

 

Advocate for System Change through PUBLIC BANKING

Public Banking Toolkit CoverCreating an economy that works for ALL Americans starts with breaking ties with transnational too-big-to-fail Wall Street banks and the gamblers who run them. Public banking offers communities a chance to keep local money invested in local projects, sheltering ordinary Americans from economic collapse and the financial disasters that follow. Learn more and get organized in your own community with the PUBLIC BANKING TOOLKIT, an anthology of articles, information, resources and organizing tools. Download it here.

Confront CORRUPTION: 
Drain the swamp from the bottom up

Learn about the Anti-Corruption Act.

Host a community watch party to view the film, THE LAUNDROMAT, an entertaining dramatization of corporate fraud and tax evasion that victimizes ordinary Americans and enriches criminals. 

Get all the tools you’ll need to schedule the virtual film viewing, organize a community Zoom call to discuss the film. Discussion questions enrich the dialogue and educational resources help you learn more about the underbelly of this transnational corruption that threatens our democracy.  

Download Discussion Questions here.

Sign up here for anti-corruption organizing right from your own desktop.

It’s unlikely that either political party will be able to separate itself from ‘the swamp’, so our ally RepresentUS offers recommendations for a state-by-state solution to corruption and ideas for monitoring corruption in your community.  

Learn more with these three videos: 

1. UnBreaking America: How to make the government work for US again 

2. How to FIX American’s Corrupt Political System

3. The Strategy to End Corruption
 

Network For Feminist Economic System Change

Money traditionally talks in a male voice, but all along it’s been women who keep the economy going.  

It’s time we understood the moving parts that are intentionally complicated and how women like you are creating solutions that work in communities across America. 

We’ll help you organize a women’s group in your community to read and discuss 
SCREWNOMICS: How Our Economy Works Against Women and Real Ways to Make Lasting Change
by WILPF member and W$D partner Rickey Gard Diamond.   

Learn more about Screwnomics.

For discussion questions and facilitator tips to make your group successful and organize locally for real change, contact us at mbgardamATgmail.com.

At An Economy Of Our Own (AEOO)connect to dynamic women making real change and finding solutions. You’ll find blog posts, articles, and webinars.  

Check out our AEOO’s “Women Unscrewing Screwnomicscolumns at Ms. magazine, online

Democratize Our Money: 
Whoever Controls Our Money Controls Democracy, the Global Economy and the Power to Change the System.

Learn how money works, where it comes from, how it’s distributed and why it’s based on YOUR DEBT. The Federal Reserve is a PRIVATE profit-making enterprise owned by Wall Street and transnational commercial banks, not part of the US government.   

Learn what that means for funding the PEOPLE’s projects, like national healthcare, affordable housing, public education, and infrastructure.  

Watch this 20-minute video, “A Solution to the Crisis

Resources

 

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