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The 5th World Conference/Beijing + 10 Debate
Association
for Women's Rights in Development (AWID)
December 05, 2002
Visit
the AWID website at www.awid.org
With the proliferation
of resources, energy and participation of NGOs in the numerous UN
system world conferences, it is time that the feminist movement
begin to ask important questions around not only the efficacy of
such world conferences in securing the economic, political and social
rights of women, but the strategic roles that feminist activists
can play at such events. It is time that we ask ourselves how we
are benefiting from such participation. Do these events truly strengthen
co-operation with governments in support of a united feminist agenda?
Alternately, how can we make our continued participation in world
conferences more strategic? What new and increasingly relevant issues
need to be reframed and revisited both by the movement and by states?
This reflection is of greater saliency given the current political
context of the internationalisation of right wing, neoliberal governments
and policies.
AWID's 9th International Forum, Reinventing Globalisation, fostered
the ongoing and critical debate of whether we, as an international
feminist movement, should be concentrating our energies on yet another
world conference. A Beijing +10 meeting, though an opportunity to
re-group and re-prioritise, may also be redundant given that much
of the Beijing Platform for Action (PFA) remains to be achieved.
In the opening plenary, Joanna Kerr, Executive Director of AWID,
stated, that she personally does not
support a fifth world conference on women in 2005 given the effort
and resources required merely to defend the gains made in previous
UN Conferences. Until we have more gender equality governments in
power, perhaps it is too dangerous to allow governments now to renegotiate
our rights, a meeting in 2010 is perhaps more appropriate. Do our
members agree? This comment, as well as some of the materials that
arose out of Forum sessions generated a great deal of input and
debate.
The responses of forum participants and members have varied from
overwhelming support for the postponement of a fifth world conference
on women to 2010 (when there might be a better political environment)
to the active preparation for a world conference in 2005, and alternative
suggestions such as a women's conference on the world.
Now that we have had some time to reflect on much of the dialogue
generated at the Forum, what discussions, dilemmas and ideas are
surfacing around the Beijing +10/Fifth World Conference debate?
We at AWID, would like to invite and engage you, our members and
forum participants, in a timely and ongoing dialogue around the
pros, cons and alternatives to the proposed 2005 Conference.
This four-week online discussion will be moderated and will include
weekly summaries and discussion topics relevant to the individual
postings and contributions made throughout the week. To participate
please subscribe by sending a message to lists@awid.org.
Please leave the subject line blank and write "subscribe 5worldconferencewomen"
(without quotes) in the text of the message.
Contributions can be made in either French, Spanish and English.
We look forward to yet another diverse, engaging and provocative
dialogue!!
And to start us thinking, here are some of the already articulated
pros and cons of participating in Beijing +10 in 2005:
A Fifth World Conference on Women may:
- Bring new
voices, new states and new issues to the table for negotiation;
- Provide access
to state representatives, strengthen state commitments to women
s human rights, or at least maintain women s human rights on the
state agenda;
- Strengthen
women s groups in working together towards assessing their successes
and challenges, locally, regionally and internationally;
- Harness widespread
international media coverage and attention;
- Increase
the international women’s movement’s momentum and commitment.
Alternately,
it may:
- Allow governments
to back out of previously made commitments, thereby weakening
their commitment to the PFA;
- Not be the
most strategic use of NGO financial and personnel resources, as
the preparations are often costly and time consuming;
- Take energy
away from the timely and necessary front line services and projects
being carried out by women s NGOs internationally;
- Distract
women s organisations and the larger movement from their independent
(of states) and united processes of strategizing;
- The above
are increasingly salient given the spread of right wing conservatism
throughout states around the globe as well as in the UN.
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