Formation de coalitions

Women's caucuses and alliances for sustainable development

A discussion circle on how women's caucuses and alliances can shape national policy agendas

 

N-PEACE Regional Training of Trainers

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Ven, 2012-01-27 00:38
2012-02-03
2012-02-10
Etc/GMT-4
Click here
Ville et Province ou Etat: 
Bangkok
Pays: 
Thailand
Lieu: 

Amari Watergate Hotel

Description: 

From the 3-10 February 2012, twenty-two women peace advocates from the N-Peace Network countries – Nepal, Timor-Leste, Sri Lanka and Indonesia – will participant in the first N-Peace Network Training of Trainers (ToT) Programme coordinated by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Asia Pacific Regional Centre (APRC), in partnership with the Institute for Inclusive Security and supported by the Australian Government’s Agency for International Development (AusAID).

The ToT is being carried out with the aim of increasing women’s knowledge, skills, and capacities to advocate for peace and security. To view the profiles of the first N-peace Network Trainers who will take part in the ToT click here.

The eight day workshop will provide a space to discuss and unpack gender and peace building issues and the Women, Peace & Security (WPS) agenda, while also building upon participants’ practical skills in the areas of training, advocacy and communications.

To view the workshop agenda click here.


Iknow Politics attended the Change Your World!—Yahoo! Business & Human Rights Summit on Women, Technology and Social/Digital Media

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Thu, 2012-01-26 04:22

Résumé: 

The event, took place in Cairo 18 January 2012, was organized by Yahoo! Business & Human Rights Program, Yahoo! Maktoob, in partnership with Vital Voices, under the banner of "Change Your World!"


The summit brought together women in leadership roles from across the MENA region, to discuss how women can use technology and the web to drive positive change.

 

Corps: 

iKnow Politics was presented in the panel of “After the Revolution: Elections and e-governance” which discussed the key roles of women in the creating change across the MENA region. The panel discussed how is women leading in the post-revolutionary world? How are technology, the Internet and media being used as platforms for launching campaigns, creating consensus, becoming political leaders, and supporting good governance? What advice or strategies would women who have run give to those waiting in the wings? iKnow Politics was highlighted as an online platform that connect women in MENA together and with other women in politics in the different regions in the world; with members exceeding 13000 from those regions who exchange information and knowledge in this important subject.


Brazil: Women Take Power in Government

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Thu, 2012-01-19 07:37

Résumé: 

Brazil's new president, Dilma Rousseff, has quickly stepped out of the shadow of her charismatic predecessor Lula. After one year in office, she is more popular than any former president was at this stage. She has surrounded herself with powerful women, who are now calling the shots in Brasília.

The epicenter of Brazilian power can be found on the fourth floor of the Palacio do Planalto in Brasília, the nation's capital. Liveried waiters elegantly carry trays of coffee through the hallways of the presidential palace, high-ranking officials wait in anterooms and air-conditioning units hum in the offices.

Planning Minister Miriam Belchior rushes past on her way to visit Chief of Staff Gleisi Hoffmann, with whom she will discuss a multi-billion-real investment program to combat poverty. On the way she is greeted by Ideli Salvatti, the woman who manages the government's relations with Congress. Two floors down, Press Secretary Helena Chagas is talking on the phone. In the front office, several women are reviewing the day's newspapers.

Corps: 

Read more in Speiegel Online, published 19 Jan


Egypt: Revolt Loses Legitimacy as Brotherhood Ignores Women Abuse

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Thu, 2012-01-19 07:28

Résumé: 

A group of men gathered around Amira El Bakry in Tahrir Square as she brandished a newspaper photo that shocked many Egyptians. It showed troops dragging a female protester along the street, her robe ripped open to reveal a blue bra and bare midriff.

“Is this OK by you?” the 25-year-old El Bakry, her voice shaking with anger, asked the men, as they squinted at the picture and one suggested the protester was trying to cause a scene. Later, El Bakry marched through Tahrir with thousands of women to condemn the brutality and demand that Egypt’s military rulers step down. Some at the Dec. 20 rally wore tight jeans tucked in boots, others were in flowing robes and full-face veils. “The women of Egypt are a red line,” they chanted.

The scene recalled the mass protests of a year ago, also joined by women of all ages and backgrounds. El Bakry supported those efforts to topple Hosni Mubarak, yet she’s worried about the new political order too. Mubarak-era army chiefs are running the country, and Islamist parties with traditional notions of women and their rights are poised to win elections that end this week. “That could be a lose-lose situation for us,” she said. “But we have a role to play, and we’ll have to keep fighting for it.”

Corps: 

Read more in Bloomberg, posted 18. Jan


Yahoo! Business & Human Rights Summit on Women, Technology and and Social/Digital Media

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Mer, 2012-01-18 14:12
2012-01-18
US/Eastern
Click here
Ville et Province ou Etat: 
Cairo
Pays: 
Egypt
Lieu: 

 Fairmont, Nile City  Cairo, Egypt

Description: 

The Yahoo! Business & Human Rights Program, along with Yahoo! Maktoob, and in partnership with Vital Voices, is hosting a summit in Cairo, Egypt on January 18, 2012.

Change Your World! Cairo 2012 will spotlight how women across the Middle East and North Africa are using technology, the Internet and various social and digital media platforms to create positive change in the world.

The Summit will be moderated by Mona Eltahawy and will focus on four primary areas: women’s leadership in governance and politics, women’s rights/human rights and social justice, journalism, and entrepreneurship. 

Confirmed participants include Dalia Ziada, Shereen Allam, and Danya Bashir Hobba.

To learn more about Change Your World! Cairo 2012, and the full line-up, please view the Agenda. If you’re based in the region and interested in attending, please see here.


Taiwan: Gender not an issue in upcoming polls

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Mar, 2012-01-10 09:38

Résumé: 

Taiwan's 13 million voters will decide on a new leader this weekend. And, for the first time, a woman is vying for the presidential seat.

Womens' participation in Taiwan politics is not new, but this is the first time that a woman is vying for the top job.

But in this island of savvy voters, gender does not seem to be an issue.

Corps: 

Arab Countries: The release of the first edition of the report “Mapping Young Scholars’ Research on Women in Public Life in the MENA Region

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Lun, 2012-01-09 03:40

Résumé: 

Young Arab scholars are increasingly interested in gender studies, the report shows, and their projects are as sophisticated as Western gender research in terms of methodology and theory. With the set criteria for inclusion and the compilation of data through the use of internet, 81 young scholars were located. The publication of those findings in the first edition constitutes only a beginning that will be pursued with further expansion and updating of the project.

Corps: 

The press release and the database are attached


Global: The year that was 2011 - Women in public spaces

Soumis par Piyoo le Mer Ven, 2012-01-06 16:40

Piyoo's picture
Résumé: 

As we wind down from 2011 I take a few moments to reflect and look back at not just the significant events of this year but what it portends for the years to come. From the role of women in mobilizing action to what led to widespread uprising against established regimes in North Africa to the awarding of nobel peace prize to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Leymah Gbowee of Liberia; and Tawakkol Karman of Yemen women have been in news through the year.

Corps: 

We have also seen a renewed focus on discourses that emphasize the role of technologies in securing a range of public goods including facilitating civic engagement and social participation, and providing more efficient access to government services while enabling a more participatory form of democratic involvement. In a report in May this year, the UN special rapporteur declared Internet had “become an indispensable tool for realizing a range of human rights.” The role of women though lauded for the ease of use of social-technologies for furthering their involvement has been surrounded by doubts and questions around continuing the engagement as their countries move into the next phase.

The role of women in 2011 also presents a good starting point for an understanding of the conditions that makes a moment transformational. Transformative moments, come in personal life as much as in political life. They rely on reconfigurations of the assumptions of what is common knowledge and how this common knowledge is translated into known-knowns by the interactions on the web. That is to say, this year we saw as loudly and clearly as possible, women not only sounded the call that brought people to the streets in the middle east but were adept at using technology in sounding this call.Thereby reconfiguring the assumption of what was considered common knowledge about women in the middle east and women and technology. The shattering of this common knowledge was then followed by the “new” known-knowns on the web of “Arab women as revolutionary”.

However in my opinion the power of this newly acquired understanding of known-knowns to shape contentious gender politics is only one of the numerous important factors that is needed to effect significant change in domestic politics. Both the interaction frequency (on the web) and closeness of relationship (of the actors on the web) are characteristics which influence the strength of ties created on the web and thereby determine the power and influence of these known-knowns to impact change. As has been witnessed in the subsequent move to electoral processes in Egypt and Tunisia where realization that overthrowing dictators was easier than overturning the pervasive supremacy of men was apparent in the absence of women in the Constitutional Amendment Committee. This also speaks to the short shelf life of known-knowns of the web and avoiding mistaking information for influence in domestic decision making.

Democratization takes place within a social, economic and historical context and does not necessarily entail a democratization of power relations in society at large, particularly between men and women. This of course has direct implications on the role that women can play. The inherent difficulties of building effective institutions for enabling equal democratic participation by all requires a move from mass mobilization to organizational capacities during transition. This is one of the many hurdles that women continue to face in seeking a seat at the democratic table.

However, putting the metaphorical ‘women’s right genie’ back in the bottle is no longer an option. The power of women in public spaces has never been more visually captured or vividly experienced by the world before as during the Arab spring. This year was an epochal period of activism which was built up because of this generation’s advances in education and professions while embracing the ability of Internet to communicate, organize and publicize everywhere, instantaneously. The future for women in public spaces can be best summed up in the words of Larbi Ben M’Hidi in the Battle of Algiers, “It’s hard enough to start a revolution, even harder to sustain it, and hardest of all to win it. But it’s only afterwards, once we’ve won, that the real difficulties begin.”

Piyoo Kochar

(The opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of current,  past or future employers)


Montenegro: Regional Conference on "Political Participation of Women as Factor of Societal Development "

Soumis par iKNOW Politics le Mer Dim, 2011-12-11 15:36
2011-12-11
2011-12-13
Europe/Vienne
Click here
Pays: 
Montenegro
Lieu: 

Montenegro Hotel Splendid, Becicci

Description: 

UNDP Gender Programme Montenegro

UNDP Montenegro is organizing conference on " Political participation of Women as a Factor of Societal Development"

Women face multiple challenges in their involvement in political life generated by patriarchal power, structures and practices, which stereotypically confine women’s role in the private and informal public sphere. In Montenegro,  women currently hold less than 11% of elected parliamentary seats far away of the 19 percent of global average of women in Parliaments.     


This conference will bring together women who are actively involved in advocacy and action for women’s participation in politics and governance ( current, former and aspiring parliamentarians, local government officials, representatives of women’s organisations, activists, political parties and other NGOs and International organizations), regional partners.

 

For more information and to follow the conference discussions, please visit: http://www.facebook.com/pages/UNDP-Gender-Programme-Montenegro/134396116646047