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100 years of sisterhood

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

 

This day highlights the milestones women across the world have achieved in the midst of patriarchal capitalist societies, hostile regimes and disaster events. Dating back to the Bread and Roses rally in New York where women immigrants marched for better working conditions in the garment factories, March 8 a century later reflects the continuing struggles of marginalised women everywhere: women who are denied access to basic human rights, silenced by bullets and maimed by poverty. If we are to change this oppressive world order, the task ahead is enormous; we need to forge alliances and work together amidst our diversity. 

Do you have something to say? Email your 100 words for women at: gdn@gdnonline.org and become part of the global GDN Digital Quilt project.

Raising our voices: Women’s resilience in conflicts and disasters

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

Gender-based violence in the conflict zones of Africa has reached epidemic proportions yet remains a silent disaster in the continent, invisible in the media and beyond donors’ reach.

Gender based violence increases during and after disasters as already fragile structure of law and order breaks down. The Global Fund for Women reports that more than a million women were raped, mutilated and abused during and after the civil wars in Sierra Leone, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Rwanda. Boys and girls are also affected. Boys served as cooks, porters and messengers while girls are forced into marriages and abducted as sex slaves.  Men, despite being often portrayed as perpetrators, are raped, killed and suffer from psychological trauma.

It is therefore important to understand that women, men, boys and girls experience disasters in different ways. In many reports after disasters, women are shown to be disproportionately affected because of their low social, economic and political status in society even before violent conflict and disaster strike. In their everyday lives, women and girls are often exposed to abuse when fetching water or gathering firewood. Women are restricted access to credit and are prohibited to inherit or own land. In disasters, women refugees are often forced to trade sex for survival, while relief policies favour refugee men.

However, despite the circumstances that women find themselves in, evidence from the ground has started to dismantle the ‘women as victims’ myth. Time and again, women continue to show their resilience in the face of disasters. They help build shelters and soup kitchens, organize self-help groups, and mobilize community to take action. Post-conflict, they play crucial roles in formal and informal peacekeeping initiatives. In 2003, Liberian women mobilized and demanded an “unconditional ceasefire, a negotiated settlement and an international community presence in Liberia.” In Ghana, during the peace negotiations in which women were markedly absent, “a group of women held a parallel meeting resulting in The Golden Tulip Declaration. They physically barricaded the stalled peace talks using their bodies as human shields and demanded that an agreement be reached.” Women in Monrovia formed the West Point Women’s Action Group to prevent rape and other violence.

Similar stories of women’s capacities and resilience abound and there is a need to systematically document these accounts in support of evidence-based research that could inform risk reduction policies and programmes and the development agenda.

There is also a need to build networks and coalitions to amplify the advocacy on gender justice and women’s rights in post-conflict and disaster situations. Writing on the status of women in Africa, Pumla Dineo Gqola, a feminist writer and academic, argues for a “coalition of women across the continent to further the cross-pollination of strategies, experience and research.” Gqola emphasised on taking advantage of the opportunities provided by ICTs.

One initiative of this nature is the Gender-based Violence Prevention Network. It was initiated by Raising Voices and UN Habitat’s Safer Cities Programme in response to the disconnect with other like-minded organizations and the need for space to share programs, approaches, strategies and ideas on GBV prevention. At the global level, the Gender and Disaster Network (GDN) draws on the interconnectivity provided by the World Wide Web to generate, share and exchange knowledge on gender and disaster risk reduction (GDRR) by documenting, analysing and transmitting the experiences of women and men; girls and boys, before, during, and after disasters and highlighting their capacities as agents of change.

Preventing gender based violence, addressing a culture of impunity and upholding women’s rights in disasters are not easy tasks. Collective action coming from the ground with support from governments, international NGOs, donors and the media is imperative to achieve fundamental change in the way society treats and views women and other marginalised social groups.

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References:
Bennett, T.W. Using Children in Armed Conflict: A Legitimate African Tradition? Criminalising the Recruitment of Child Soldiers. ISS Monograph Series No. 32 December 1998. Institute of Security Studies South Africa. http://www.iss.co.za/pubs/monographs/no32/UsingChildren.html (accessed 15 November 2010)

Cape Town Principles on the Recruitment of Children into the Armed Forces on Demobilization and Social reintegration of Child Soldiers in Africa. Cape Town, South Africa, 27-30 April 1997.

Gcola, P.D. The Status of Women in Africa. In Gender Instruments in Africa Consolidating Gains in the Southern African Development Community,ed. Ruiters, M. Institute for Global Dialogue, South Africa. 2008.

Global Fund for Women Annual Report 2009-2010. http://www.globalfundforwomen.org/what-we-do/publications/reports/latest-annual-report/1826 (accessed 10 November 2010)

Marsh, M. , Purdin, S. and Navani, S. ‘Addressing sexual violence in humanitarian emergencies’, Global Public Health, 1:2, 133 – 146. International Rescue Committee, New York. USA. 2006.

Neumayer, E. and Plumper, T. The Gendered Nature of Natural Disasters: The Impact of Catastrophic Events on the Gender Gap in Life Expectancy, 1981-2002. Final Version. Social Science Research Network. January 2007. http://www.gdnonline.org/resources/SSRN_Neumayer_Plumper_GenderedNature_NaturalDisasters.pdf accessed 10 November 2010

Reproductive Health Matters. Conflict and and Crisis Settings: Promoting Sexual and Reproductive Rights. Ed. Petchesky, R.P. http://www.rhm-elsevier.com accessed 10 November 2010

Scanlon, H. and Muddell K. Gender and Transitional Justice in Africa: Progress and Prospects. In African Journal on Conflict Resolution. Vol. 9, No. 2. ACCORD 2009.

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Note: An excerpted and edited version of this article appeared in the Genderlink website.

Appeal for Gendered Disaster Risk Reduction - Haitian earthquake

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Gender and women’s networks around the world appealed for a gender-sensitive approach to the Haitian earthquake. Below are some links to news, solidarity statements issued by women’s groups, and resources for humanitarian and emergency responders:

SOLIDARITY STATEMENTS

GDN reaching out — how can we help?

Deklarasyon AWID sou kriz imanitè ann Ayiti apre Tranblemandtè janvye 2010 lan
Statement on Haiti issued by The Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID)

Rekòmandasyon sou politik Kowalisyon Entènasyonal Fanm Defansè Dwa Moun (Creole)
Policy recommendations from the International Coalition of Women’s Human Rights Defenders (English)

RESOURCES

Gender and Disaster Network

Gendering DRR — Resources for emergency responders and humanitarian workers
Reducción del Riesgo de Desastres con Enfoque de Género. Recursos Claves

NEWS

Tens of thousands of pregnant women at risk

After the quake, depend on women

Haiti earthquake situationer reports

Haiti’s children most vulnerable after massive quake - aid agencies

GDN@Geneva - Day 2 in Photos

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Writing on the 'Gender Wall'

Zen Delica visiting the GDN booth

Women and men at the plenary

GDN@Geneva - The Day in Photos

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Opening Plenary of the Second Session of the Global Platform on Disaster Risk Reduction, Geneva

GDN member Akhteruzzaman Sano at the booth

Toni Frisch from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation with Yvette and Kristinne

Maureen and John Holmes discussing gender in drr at the GDN booth

Ben Wisner writing down his thoughts on the GDN Gender Wall

International Women’s Day and the GDN blog

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Our blog is officially online! Just in time for the commemoration of International Women’s day. But as a GDN member said, which I fully agree, everyday should be a celebration of women’s rights.

A recent visit to Mozambique provided photos of women carrying watermelons, water jugs, and other odds and ends on their heads. The absence of men was particularly striking. Female headed households (FHHs) in Mozambique comprise 22% of rural households and earns an average of $145 annually. Drought, floods, low-input agriculture, high marketing costs and land tenure insecurity contribute to a high level of food insecurity especially among FHHs. (ACDI/VOCA, 2008)

Although we have been observing this important day since the 1900s,  women still continue to battle for their rights to be recognised a century later. Not undermining the significant achievements of the last century, which brought us the adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW, 1979), the Vienna Declaration (1993), the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women (1993), the Beijing Platform for Action (1995) and its amendments,  the United Nations Security Council Resoultion 1325 (UNSCR, 2000) and recently the UNSCR 1820 (2008), among others, we have yet to see gender equality and women’s rights fully recognised in the climate process and in policies on drr.

I mentioned these two in particualr to bring to attention two significant events this year where gender and women’s networks could take their advocacy further and influence the outcomes of the UN Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC) and  the Global Platform on Disater Reduction.

During the first session of the Global Platform in 2007,  the GDN called for the prioritisation of gender within the HFA to:

1. Ensure that disaster risk reduction is a national and local priority which explicitly recognizes gender as a cross-cutting concern requiring attention throughout response, recovery, rehabilitation, preparedness and mitigation phases of disaster reduction planning;

2. Identify, assess and monitor disaster risks and enhance early warning, recognizing that the daily routines and social conditions of women and men, girls and boys place them differently at risk, and engage them in different networks of communication;

3. Use knowledge, innovation and education to build a culture of safety and resilience at all levels and for all members of nations and communities, based on a solid knowledge base of gender-disaggregated data, tools and information;

4. Reduce the underlying risk factors which result in differential levels and occasions of vulnerability and endangerment, and shape the capacities and resources of women and men to minimise harm; and finally,

5. Strengthen disaster preparedness for effective response at all levels by promoting the inclusion of women in disaster-related professions where they are underrepresented, and actively engaging with grassroots women’s groups - scaling up their effective solutions through partnerships - to enhance resilience in families and communities.

Download the GDN Oral Statement here.

During the second session of the Global Platform this year, a Global Assessment Report on DRR will be presented, which would review, among others the implementation of the HFA. A parallel assessment looking at the promises of HFA is being done by the Global Network for Disaster Reduction, involving stakeholders who are ‘most impacted by disasters.’ It would be interesting to compare the resulting documents from these two separate reviews.

In closing, I would like to invite members of the Network to use this blog as a medium to share their thoughts on issues surrounding gender and drr.  It could be a commentary, a photo, a poem or a video. It could be formal or informal writing and  writers could choose to remain anonymous. We have to agree on one thing though, that pieces written here do not necessarily reflect the Network’s view and remain the sole responsibility of the author/s.

Welcome to the GDN blog and happy women’s day!