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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#98
February 2008
focus on the 52nd csw
The
Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1325 on women, peace
and security, 31 October 2000.
For the full text of the resolution, please CLICK
HERE
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with "subscribe" as the subject heading.
For past issues of the newsletter, CLICK
HERE.
For
PDF version of this newsletter, CLICK HERE
THIS ISSUE OF 1325 PEACEWOMEN E-NEWS FEATURES:
1. Editorial: Financing
for Gender Equality & Sustainable Peace
2. Women, Peace and Security News
3. Feature Event: 52nd Session
of the CSW – Resources & Events
4. Feature Statement:
WILPF CSW Statement
5. Feature Initiative: Gender
Equality Architecture Reform(GEAR) Campaign
6. Feature Resource:AWID Resources on Aid Effectiveness
& WILPF Resource : You Get What You Pay For ! Disarming For
Gender Equality
7. NGOWG Update: NGOWG at the CSW
8. Women,
Peace and Security Calendar
The PeaceWomen Project is a project of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom. Please visit us at http://www.peacewomen.org
This month’s edition of the
1325 PeaceWomen E-News focuses on the 52nd Session of the UN Commission
on the Status of Women (CSW) that is currently taking place here
in New York. The Women’s International League for Peace and
Freedom is once again monitoring this process. In order to bring
the activities in New York to women, peace and security advocates
more broadly, we have developed CSW focused web pages and have included
here links to these and other useful CSW resources and events (Item
3). Also included in this edition is our WILPF statement submitted
to the CSW (Item 4). This and our leaflet ‘You get What You
Pay For !’ in this month’s Feature Resources (Item 6)
bring across WILPF’s key messages around disarmament and gender
equality. The levels of the world’s military expenditure should
sound the alarm for those focusing on the priority theme for this
year’s CSW on which governments are currently negotiating
new policy commitments – Financing for Gender Equality and
Women’s Empowerment. WILPF has gathered over 100 women from
more than 40 countries in Geneva for the annual International Women's
Day Seminar to echo the concern heard and felt at the CSW that current
military spending is over USD$ 1200 billion, which amounts to organized
crime and corporate welfare for the arms traders and weapons profiteers.
As our CSW statement notes, ‘no amount of policy will make
a difference unless : gender equality is seen as a critical part
of public finance management ; is factored into macroeconomic policy
and development financing ; and is seen as more important than weapons.’
A measure of commitment to gender
equality is the levels of women’s equal participation and
this CSW also offered an opportunity for governments to review the
implementation of their previous commitments from the 48th Session
on Women's Equal Participation in Conflict Prevention, Management
and Conflict Resolution and in Post-Conflict peace-building. As
evidenced by several of our news stories, while women’s participation
in peace processes remains inadequate women continue to engage in
exciting initiatives for change – from the engagement of Kenyan
women in bringing peace to calls for women’s political participation
in the diverse contexts of Iraq, Liberia, Nigeria and Pakistan.
Governments engaged in this theme at the CSW through an interactive
dialogue held on February 29th. As was made clear by panelists,
the issues of women’s participation must go beyond numbers.
There is a need, for example, to address issues such as sexual and
gender-based violence which limit women’s possibilities for
full engagement. Action on such issues needs to take place on a
multiplicity of fronts but one thing is abundantly clear –
that without resourcing the chances of success are severly limited.
This point was recognized in the interventions of governments during
the interactive dialogue but it is not a new problem. As cited in
the NGOWG Update (Item 7), the Secretary-General in his 2004 report
on women, peace and security noted that “[i]nadequate specific
resource allocations have contributed to slow progress in the implementation
of [SCR 1325] in practice.’
A further challenge to implementation
efforts is one that goes beyond resources. When one considers the
UN’s own efforts to implement 1325, it is clear that there
is a need for a more coherent, coordinated and strategic approach.
What is lacking, however, is an entity within the UN with the status,
resources and on-the-ground presence to make this a reality. This
gap within the women, peace and security sphere is felt as keenly
in the broader work on gender equality and women’s human rights.
The campaign to reform the UN’s gender equality architecture
is a response from women around the world to address this crucial
gap. The GEAR Campaign, this month’s Feature Initiative (Item
5) calls for a stronger women’s entity that can deliver results
on the ground. At this year’s CSW, women are taking forward
this call and the GEAR Campaign message that : ‘[s]trengthening
the UN’s gender equality machinery is a crucial part of financing
for development. It will better enable the UN and governments to
deliver on promises made to advance gender equality and women’s
human rights, which are essential components of development at the
global and country levels.’ As the negotiations on the CSW
outcome documents progress, we hope that governments demonstrate
their commitment to furthering gender equality by taking on these
and other concrete proposals for change.
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We continue to welcome contributions to the newsletter’s content.
Contributions for the March 2008 edition should be sent to enewssubmissions@peacewomen.org
by Thursday 20 March 2008.
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2.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
We
‘cannot wait’ to end violence against women –
Secretary-General Ban
February 25, 2008 – (UN News Center) Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon today kicked off a multi-year global campaign bringing
together the United Nations, governments and civil society to try
to end violence against women, calling it an issue that “cannot
wait.”
Central
African Republic: Thousands Fall Victim to Sexual Violence
February 22, 2008 - (UN News Service ) Over 15 per cent of women
and girls in the violence-ridden north of the Central African Republic
(CAR) are victims of rape and other forms of sexual violence, the
United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA) said today.
Kenya's
"women in white" to circle peace talks
February 21, 2008 - (Reuters) Kenyan women wearing white
clothes to symbolise peace vowed on Thursday to surround the venue
of crisis talks until a solution is found to the east African country's
worst turmoil since independence.
Liberia:
Women Re-Awaken 30 Percent Participation in Gov't
February 20, 2008 - (The News) The struggle for women to participate
in government on par with their male counterparts has again come
to the fore as more than 60 Liberian women gathered at the Ministry
of Gender and Development yesterday to discuss their participation
in political dispensation.
Zimbabwe:
Move to Empower Women Politicians
February 20, 2008 – (AllAfrica) A women empowerment
group has started holding training workshops for aspiring women
parliamentarians. Women Trust began the programme to empower women
candidates yesterday in Harare with 65 aspiring Zanu-PF women MPs
in attendance.
Some Pakistan Women Warded Off Voting
February 18, 2008 - (The Associated Press) Despite the historic
elevation to the premiership in the 1990s by Bhutto, who was assassinated
in December, women still have little political clout in Pakistan.
In the ethnic Pashtun belt bordering Afghanistan, things are going
from bad to worse.
AFRICA:
First ladies fight for peace
February 18, 2008 (IRIN) - In a bid to support initiatives
to restore and strengthen peace on the unrest-prone continent, wives
of African heads of state or their representatives have formed a
conflict-resolution group.
iran:
Campaign Members Raheleh Asgarizadeh and Nasim Khosravi Arrested
February 15, 2008 - (Change for Equality) Raheleh Asgarizadeh
and Nasim Khosravi, two members of the One Million Signatures Campaign
were arrested on the afternoon of February 14th, in Daneshjoo Park,
while collecting signatures in support of the Campaign’s petition.
Iraq:
Conference addresses role of women in Iraq
February 14, 2008 - (Middle East Times) A newly formed women's committee
met before community leaders and their colleagues in a school in
Iraq to discuss issues regarding community welfare. Representatives
of the Hawr Rajab's Women's Committee said women were faced with
taking on head-of-household roles as many of the Iraqi men have
died from the violence since the 2003 invasion, the Multi-National
Force-Iraq said.
Can
a Kenyan Peace Agreement Stem Rape?
February 12, 2008 - (Alternet) While Kofi Annan gets closer to a
peace agreement, the women of Kenya are still paying for the devastating
rise in sexual violence in the post-electoral conflict.
Influential Women's Magazine Silenced in Iran
February 10, 2008 - (WOMENSENEWS) Iran's most influential women's
magazine, Zanan, has become the latest victim of a government intent
on censoring, harassing and imprisoning opponents, journalists in
particular. Officials accused the monthly journal of damaging society
by being too negative toward Iran and closed the publication Jan.
28.
Congolese
officials receive UN-backed training on sex crime investigation
February 8, 2008 – More than 40 military and justice
officials in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have benefited
from a United Nations-sponsored training workshop on investigating
sex crimes, which are rampant in the vast African nation.
Southern
Africa: NGOs demand that SADC leaders prove their commitment to
gender equality
February 5, 2008 – (Pambazuka News) NGOs meeting in
Johannesburg have challenged leaders of the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) to put their money where their mouths are by adopting
a binding protocol for promoting gender equality at their August
summit
Europe:
2008, European Year of the Intercultural Dialogue – With Women?
February 2, 2008 - (Women Living Under Muslim Laws) The Intercultural
Dialogue can be a good mechanism to voice, expose & condemn
those practices that violate women’s rights and silence women’s
voices. Intercultural dialogue and diversity of culture should be
promoted in a way that respects women’s rights.
Vietnam:
Woman Writer Released, but Crackdown Continues
February 1, 2008 – (Human Rights Watch) The Vietnamese
government released the award-winning writer Tran Khai Thanh Thuy
from prison yesterday, but continues to hold dozens of other peaceful
activists in prison or under house arrest, Human Rights Watch said
today.
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For
more regional women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
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52nd session of the Commission on the Status of Women
25 February – 7 March 2008, UN Headquarters,
New York
The 52nd Session of the UN Commission on the Status
of Women is currently taking place in New York. The themes for this
session are :
Priority theme : Financing for Gender Equality
and the Empowerment of Women
Review Theme : Women's Equal Participation in Conflict Prevention,
Management and Conflict Resolution and in Post-Conflict peace-building
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CSW on the Web:
The PeaceWomen Project has developed web pages
for the 52nd Session of the CSW featuring :
ß UN Documents & links,
ß NGO Documents & links,
ß Governmental Participation
For these pages please visit : http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ecosoc/CSW52/index.htm
For the official UN website for the CSW 52: http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/52sess.htm
For the NGO Committee on the Status of Women please
visit : http://www.ngocsw.org/
Women UNlimited blogging the CSW 52nd session:
Several participants are blogging live from the CSW on
the OpenDemocracy website.
For this blog please visit : http://www.opendemocracy.net/blog/csw_2008
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Women, Peace and Security-Themed Parallel Events:
WILPF Events at the CSW this Week :
This week WILPF will be hosting two events at the Church
Centre at the UN on 44th Street & 1st Ave, New York.
"Women and Armed Conflict: The Case of
Colombia"
Date: 5-March-2008
Time: 1:30 PM - 3 PM
Room: Church Center - Hardin Room (11th Fl.)
This panel and discussion explores the difficulties
faced by Colombian women in participating in the processes of peace
in Colombia and looks at some of the recommendations for the Colombian
to consider to improve women's participation.
"Women, War and Budgeting for Peace"
Date: 6-March-2008
Time: 11:45 AM - 1:15 PM
Room: Church Center - Boss Room (8th Fl.)
This panel will explore gender budgeting. It will
examine the waste of human and economic resources on war and armaments
and the cost of this for investment in gender equality and sustainable
peace and development.
We look forward to see you there!
Calendar of Events:
The PeaceWomen Project has developed a calendar
highlighting women, peace and security events taking place at the
52nd session of the CSW.
This calendar can be found at :
For a compilation of women, peace and security
events, please visit :
http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ecosoc/CSW52/NGOdocs/WPS_calendar.pdf
For the calendar of other UN events, please visit
:
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/conf/seforms/dspUNcalendarUN.html
For the calendar of other NGO events, please visit
:
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/conf/seforms/dspUNcalendar2.html
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WILPF CSW STATEMENT
The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
(WILPF) was among the first group of non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) to receive consultative status with the United Nations
and has monitored every session of the Commission on the Status
of Women (CSW). The 52nd Session offers an opportunity for Member
States to demonstrate their commitment to the broad goals of women’s
empowerment, human rights and gender equality, goals WILPF has
continually worked towards since its inception in 1915 as part
of its ongoing work to prevent armed conflict and to establish
the conditions for sustainable peace on a global scale.
WILPF recognizes the many commitments expressed by Member States
and applauds the concrete achievements by governments and the
UN system towards realizing equality between women and men as
outlined in the preamble of the Charter. Unfortunately a significant
gap between policy and practice still remains. We look forward
to the Commission addressing the persistent gaps in implementing
policy commitments, particularly to the role played by the failure
to allocate adequate human and economic resources devoted to implementation
of gender equality goals.
WILPF looks forward to Member State’s evaluation of their
prior commitments from the 48th Session of the CSW on “Women’s
equal participation in conflict prevention, management and conflict
resolution and in post-conflict peacebuilding.” While laudable
work is being undertaken, particularly through efforts to implement
Resolution 1325, much remains to be done. Women remain excluded
from or marginalized in decision-making on the full spectrum of
security issues, within peace processes and within the UN system
itself.
In the work of the Peacebuilding Commission, it is unclear whether
commitments to include women in post-conflict peacebuilding have
made a practical difference on the ground. While there is a lack
of demonstrated political will to ensure women’s participation,
more tangible still is the poor commitment of resources to these
issues. This despite agreement in the 48th Session to “continue
to make resources available nationally and internationally for
prevention of conflict and ensure women’s participation
in the elaboration and implementation of strategies for preventing
conflict.”
WILPF thus welcomes the Commission’s consideration of the
important theme of Financing for Gender Equality and Women’s
Empowerment. In developing policy in this area, it is critical
that the clear and strong connections be drawn between this issue
of financing and resources and the realization of all other commitments
to development and gender equality made by the Commission and
Member States more broadly; including commitments to women’s
full and equal participation. It is not simply that women have
the right to participate as equals. It is also that without women’s
participation and empowerment and without gender equality, sustainable
peace, sustainable development and true human security are unattainable.
As then UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan repeatedly articulated:
“study after study has taught us that there is no tool
for development more effective than the empowerment of women.
No other policy is as likely to raise economic productivity, or
to reduce infant mortality. No other policy is as sure to improve
nutrition and promote health – including the prevention
of HIV/AIDS. No other policy is as powerful in increasing the
chances of education for the next generation. And I would also
venture that no policy is more important in preventing conflict,
or in achieving reconciliation after a conflict has ended.”
WILPF welcomed the recognition of the links between participation,
equality and development in the Outcome Document of the 2005 World
Summit. In particular WILPF welcomed the recognition that the
full and effective implementation of the Beijing Platform for
Action and outcome of the 23rd Special Session of the General
Assembly “is an essential contribution to achieving the
internationally agreed development goals, including those contained
in the Millennium Declaration.” This contribution is not
possible without resources and gender-centered financing policy.
The failure to finance gender equality is the failure to finance
development and human security.
The consideration of Financing for Gender Equality and Women’s
Empowerment requires providing direct, sustained and increased
financial and human resources to discrete budget lines, as well
as support to women’s groups and organizations. It is, however,
critical also to look beyond this level and type of support. Financing
for Gender Equality is not just about adding more resources to
existing efforts. It is also about how resources are spent by
government in the economy as a whole. WILPF welcomes the work
done by some governments to engage in gender responsive budgeting
and calls on all governments to do so and to enhance these efforts.
This involves not only analyzing the differential impact of government
spending on men and women but also offers a means to critically
reflect on government spending priorities and to prioritize human
security and gender equality.
WILPF finds it unacceptable that despite the many commitments
made to gender equality and women’s empowerment the figures
tell a different story:
- Women make up 70 percent of the world’s poor and 67%
of the world’s illiterate. They own just one per cent of
assets worldwide;
- According to a 1995 UNDP study, more than two-thirds of the
world’s unpaid work is done by women – the equivalent
of $11 trillion (approximately half of the world’s GDP);
- Out of $69 billion of overseas development assistance made
available in 2003, only $2.5 billion or 3.6% was earmarked for
gender equality as a significant or principal objective. Yet,
in the three year period from 2002 to 2004, US military aid to
Israel alone totaled over $9 billion with another $6 billion to
Egypt and $4 billion to Pakistan;
- Of $20 billion in bilateral aid in 2001-2005, an OECD DAC study
reports only $5 billion was allocated to projects promoting gender
equality; that is the cost of approximately 2 weeks of the occupation
of Iraq;
- The combined budgets of the UN women’s entities is only
$65 million only 0.005% of world military expenditure of $1204
billion in 2006;
- The entire budget of the only operational women’s entity
– UNIFEM – in 2006 was only $57 million only 2 % of
the $2.34 billion budget of UNICEF for the same period;
- The World Bank estimates the cost of interventions to promote
gender equality under MDG 3 is $7-13 per capita. The world’s
military expenditure in 2006 amounted to $184 per capita.
What is clear is that in scales that matter, commitments to gender
equality are not yet real. No amount of policy will make a difference
unless: gender equality is seen as a critical part of public finance
management; is factored into macroeconomic policy and development
financing; and is seen as more important than weapons.
WILPF calls on Member States:
- To invest in human security, equality and sustainable peace
and to end the prioritization of war and military spending and
the impunity enjoyed by war and weapons profiteers.
- To strengthen the development and human rights work of the
United Nations by strengthening and better resourcing its gender
equality architecture as a critical aspect of financing for gender
equality.
- To include women as senior decision makers in economic and
trade policy including through ensuring their input in the decision
making of supra-national institutions such as the World Trade
Organization and the Bretton Woods Institutions. WILPF calls on
Member States to provide mechanisms by which women are guaranteed
an opportunity to input into the decision-making processes of
these institutions at a local level and that these processes take
account the needs of gender equality and women’s empowerment.
- To pressure the Security Council to implement Article 26 of
the United Nations Charter, which charges the Security Council
with formulating a system to regulate armaments and reduce military
expenditures, in order to promote international peace and security
and free up human and economic resources for development.
- To participate in the UN Register of Conventional Arms in order
to enhance transparency of international arms transfers, procurement
through national production, holdings, and relevant policies,
and in the UN Instrument for Reporting Military Expenditures to
enhance transparency of spending on military personnel, operations,
maintenance, procurement, construction, research, and development.
WILPF looks forward to the development of policy during this
52nd Session of the CSW that will ensure a gender-perspective
in the 2008 follow-up to the Monterrey Consensus on Financing
for Development in Qatar and the follow-up to the Paris Declaration
on Aid Effectiveness in Ghana.
As a 92-year old organization, WILPF continues to work toward
collective human security and sustainable peace and away from
militarism and economic violence, in collaboration with civil
society, governmental and international actors, including within
the United Nations system. We look forward to working with others
from around the world to dismantle the prevailing culture of militarism
and create a culture of peace in which gender inequality, racism
and discrimination, economic injustice, violence and oppression
are absent and in which women are full and equal participants.
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For other WILPF statements, please click HERE
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Gender Equality Architecture Reform (GEAR) Campaign
A Stronger UN Entity for Women
The global campaign for Gender Equality Architecture
Reform welcomes consideration of “financing for gender equality
and the empowerment of women” as the priority theme for the
52nd session of the Commission on the Status of Women.
We welcome also statements by the Secretary-General and member states
in support of strengthening the UN’s gender equality architecture.
The campaign for Gender Equality Architecture Reform now comprising
82 organizations in over 35 countries believes that the creation
of a stronger UN entity for women will greatly advance gender equality,
the empowerment of women and their human rights throughout the world.
For the past three decades, the UN has been a galvanizing force
in efforts to define a comprehensive global agenda for peace and
security, human rights, gender equality, women’s empowerment,
poverty eradication and sustainable development. As a result, there
have been significant advances for women, including through the
Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination against
Women, the Beijing Platform for Action, the Millennium Summit, and
various UN agencies have done important work on specific aspects
of gender equality.
The UN, however, still lacks an effective mechanism to deliver on
many of the essential commitments made. It has several small under-resourced
agencies focused exclusively on women’s issues and other larger
agencies make critical contributions to women’s human rights
and gender equality, but it is usually a small part of their mandate,
and often receives low priority.
As the Secretary-General has already stated on 25 November 2007,
a stronger United Nations entity for women should be able to “call
on all of the United Nations system’s resources in the work
to empower women and realize gender equality worldwide” and
“mobilize forces of change at the global level, and inspire
enhanced results at the country level.”
The campaign for Gender Equality Architecture Reform therefore calls
on member states of the UN, with the support of the women’s
movement, to act now to create a stronger UN entity for women.
- An Under-Secretary-General should head this entity for women,
to ensure the necessary status required for representation and decision-making
at the highest levels both in policy-development and program operations
at the global and country levels. The new Under-Secretary-General
post would provide higher level leadership than at present to more
effectively drive the gender equality and women’s empowerment
agenda.
- Extensive field presences and a strong policy and programmatic
mandate is essential for a strengthened UN entity for women to effectively
improve the lives of women on the ground.
- Substantial and predictable resources to ensure that the new entity
for women has the capacity to meet expectations and deliver results
at all levels. It must be funded initially at a minimum level of
$500 million to $1 billion USD with increases over time.
- Accountability within the new entity for women, at both national
and international levels, including through meaningful involvement
of civil society, in particular non-governmental organizations for
women.
- The new entity should also promote gender mainstreaming by the
integration of gender equality and women’s human rights throughout
the UN and especially in the UN Country Pilots and in all UN reform
processes.Strengthening the UN’s gender equality machinery
is a crucial part of financing for development. It will better enable
the UN and governments to deliver on promises made to advance gender
equality and women’s human rights at the global and country
levels.
Statement submitted on behalf of the global campaign for Gender
Equality Architecture Reform in the United Nations by Amnesty International,
Asia Pacific Women’s Watch, Association for Women’s
Rights In Development, Center for Women’s Global Leadership,
Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era, African Women's
Development & Communication Network, International Planned Parenthood
Federation, Women’s Environment and Development Organization,
WIDE - Globalising Gender Equality and Social Justice non-governmental
organizations in consultative status with the Economic and Social
Council
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For more Global & Regional Initiatives, click
HERE
For more Country-specific Initiatives, click HERE
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AWID- Resources on Aid Effectiveness
AWID is pleased to announce that their Aid Effectiveness and Women's
Rights Series is now available online for download.
This set of Primers shares critical information and analysis about
the new aid architecture that has emerged as a result of the Paris
Declaration (PD)-the most recent donor-partner agreement designed
to increase the impact of aid. This aid effectiveness agenda, the
result of the signature and implementation of the Paris Declaration
process currently determines how and to whom aid is being delivered
as well as how donor and aid-recipient countries are relating to
one another. We hope the information, analysis and proposals included
in these primers will encourage women's rights advocates and other
actors to understand the relevance of this process and to engage
in it to support the call for a more comprehensive, balanced, and
inclusive approach to reforming aid so that it reaches the people
who need it most, including women! Stay tuned for the 5th and final
primer in this series devoted to highlighting some of the specific
concerns and recommendations from a women's rights perspective.
To download the primers, please
visit : http://www.awid.org/go.php?pg=aid_effectiveness
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WILPF Resource :You Get
What You Pay For
Disarming for gender equality
Achieving universal gender equality
is an ambitious goal, on that was articulated in the UN Charter
and many resolutions, conference outcome documents and decisions
of governments. It will require a shift in the way we think about
gender roles and the relationship between men and women, boys and
girls. Legislation needs to be changed, as well as social attitudes
and norms. Serious financial resources will need to be made available.
Compared to military spending, however, the amounts required seem
ridiculously small. In 2006 the world’s military expenditure
was estimated to be US$ 1,204 billion or US$ 184 per capita.1 Funding
gender equality, as set out in the Millennium Development Goals,
costs less than 20 percent of military spending.
For the full resource please visit
:
http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ecosoc/CSW52/NGOdocs/YouGetWhatYouPayFor.pdf
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For more women, peace and security resources, click
HERE
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Financing for Gender Equality 52nd Session of the Commission
on the Status of Women
Gina Torry, Coordinator
“Inadequate specific resource allocations have contributed
to slow progress in the implementation of the resolution [Security
Council resolution 1325] in practice. We must ensure that regular
budgetary resources are specifically allocated for both gender
mainstreaming and initiatives targeted at women and girls.”
Secretary-General’s report on Women, Peace and Security
(S/2004/814).
Despite laudable efforts by many women’s groups, Member
States and United Nations actors, the lack of dedicated regular
budgetary funds allocated to ensure the broad implementation of
Security Council resolution 1325 continues to impede women’s
equal participation in conflict prevention, management and conflict
resolution in post-conflict peacebuilding peacemaking and peacebuilding
processes.
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security urges Member
States at the 52nd Session of the Commission on the Status of
Women to:
∑ Recognize the serious under-resourcing of the United
Nation’s gender-specific entities necessary to support women’s
equal participation in conflict prevention, conflict resolution
and in post-conflict peace-building;
∑ Recognize that extra-allocated funding alone for gender
equality is not sufficient. The United Nations must guarantee
that adequate, dedicated and sustained regular budgetary funds
are enhanced in order to build and consolidate the capacity of
women and women’s groups to participate fully in peacebuilding
processes;
∑ Reiterate a call for improved collection, analysis and
inclusion of information on women and gender issues, including
sexual violence, as part of conflict prevention and early warning
efforts;
∑ Support the UN Secretary-General’s recommendation
for a dedicated Security Council mechanism. A dedicated mechanism
would provide more effective monitoring of women’s equal
participation in conflict prevention and peacebuilding and sexual
violence against women in conflict;
∑ Support the call for stronger UN women’s entity,
including enhanced resources, operational capacity in the field,
and high level leadership to drive the agenda, including the protection
of women’s rights and equal participation in conflict prevention,
management and conflict resolution in post-conflict peacebuilding
peacemaking and peacebuilding processes.
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| 8.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Training of gender audit
facilitators
March 3-8, 2008, Turin, Italy
International Training Centre, Gender Coordination Unit
This course draws on the extensive experience
the ILO has developed in-house in a series of groundbreaking gender
audits involving staff and constituents from virtually every region
in the world.
For more information, please click HERE
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Fourth Annual International
Women’s Day Celebration Breakfast
March 4, 2008, San Diego, CA
Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice University of San
Diego
The Fourth Annual International Women’s
Day Celebration Breakfast, co-convened with Voices of Women, the
Women’s Equity Council of the United Nations Association
of San Diego and the University of San Diego Women’s Center
will report on the 52nd annual session of the Commission on the
Status of Women (CSW) at the United Nations in New York.
For more information, please click HERE
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Meaningful Movies: Film
ScreeninIng
March 7, Seattle, USA
Wallingford Neighbord for Peace and Justice
This documentary explores how Rwanda is increasing women's participation
in politics and civil society and what that gender justice means
to ending and preventing war and other forms of violence.
For more information, please click here
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International
Women's Day
March 8, 2008, Worldwide
United Nations
In 1975, during International
Women's Year, the United Nations began celebrating 8 March as
International Women's Day. Two years later, in December 1977,
the General Assembly adopted a resolution proclaiming a United
Nations Day for Women's Rights and International Peace to be observed
on any day of the year by Member States, in accordance with their
historical and national traditions.
For more information, please click
HERE
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Women,
Power & Politics exhibition
March 8, 2008, San Francisco, CA
International Museum of Women
For more information, please click
HERE
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Women and Sustainable
Communities - a Little Goes a Long Way
March 12, 2008, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Norwood Hotel, 112 Marion
Street, Winnipeg, Canada
The Winnipeg Chapter of UNIFEM
Diana DeLaronde-Colombe, the
1st Canadian to receive the Women’s World Summit Foundation
Prize for Women’s Creativity in Rural Life, will speak about
her work for the grassroots Northern Foods Initiative in Manitoba.
Tickets $30 from McNally Robinson
Bookseller locations.
For more information, please contact Liz 779 9169 or email: unifem@shaw.ca
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Women,
Action & the Media (WAM): A Conference for Activists, Journalists
& Everyone
March 28-30, 2008, Cambridge, MA
For more information, please click
HERE
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For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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