Tag Archives: women’s activism

Clinton Tackles The High Profile, Big Impact Issues

WASHINGTON - JANUARY 22:  U.S. Secretary of St...
Image by Getty Images via Daylife

We are starting to get a glimpse of what high profile issues Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is taking into her portfolio and under her wing to move forward on the global stage. We also have a clue as to one of the ways she might approach her enormous task.

The Issues Clinton is taking on:

Diplomacy – no surprise there. But the experienced peace makers she’s chosen to advise her and act as envoys represent  a 180 degree turn from the bellicose and oil-hungry Cheney who pined to invade Iraq and, while doing it, award billions of dollars of no bid contracts to his old company pals at Halliburton. This is the company which proceeded to do such things as trucking ice hundreds of miles from Kuwait, with an armed escort, including hovering helicopters, for protection, rather than build a generator and ice maker in the Green Zone. It will be a healthy change to see foreign policy guided by a desire for peace instead of power and profit. As The Boston Globe states in Diplomacy returns: “the appointments of  former senator George Mitchell and erstwhile diplomat Richard Holbrooke are encouraging signs. Mitchell has a deserved reputation for resoluteness, fairness, and unflappability. Some of the lessons he learned from his role in forging the 1998 Good Friday agreement that led to peace in Northern Ireland are applicable to the Mideast”.  So we can have some realistic hope for the MidEast under Clinton’s tenure.

Energy security and climate change

Clinton is on record saying energy security must be an important and integrated element of US foreign policy:

“These are issues on which I will personally engage, and they will consistently receive high-level attention at the [State] Department. I will work with our friends and partners around the world, who are facing the same challenges. I also intend to ensure that the department works vigorously through the interagency process on these issues,” Clinton responded to questions following her Jan. 13 confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

As concrete demonstration of that commitment, Clinton announced a new climate change envoy Monday. According to the Earth Times, Todd Stern will become the country’s chief climate negotiator with the international community, which is hoping to agree to a new climate treaty by the end of this year. Stern, who  served as a senior advisor to former president Bill Clinton and led the US delegation to the groundbreaking Kyoto talks in 1997, will also be involved in domestic US efforts to reduce pollution.

Next up?  The Economy

Wihout saying more publicly, Clinton has telegraped the message that she plans to address global economic issues in order to improve our interrelated economies, and to alleviate the various financial stresses at home.  It won’t be a moment too soon.

Bolstering Women’s Role In The Effort For Change

To accomplish these difficult goals and meet these daunting challenges, Clinton has many tools as her disposal including extremely accomplished and capable envoys.  But she also has something else.  She has the good will of many women in the U.S. and around the world. Women who are willing to listen to her and put their shoulder to the wheel in order to bring about sorely needed change.

At her confirmation hearing, Clinton pledged to focus more attention on women’s issues, especially in Afghanistan.  It has long been a Clinton policy, dating from the Clinton administration, to leverage the underutilized resource of women and their efforts to lift up a nation and bring peace and prosperity to a region. I participated in former President Bill Clinton’s initiative to bring economic empowerment to women in the America’s by such simple but effective policies as micro-lending to allow women to start businesses.  I believe the underpinning of this approach is that unrest, dispair and instability don’t exist in a vacuum. To bring peace, a region must have hope, the kind that comes with providing education and training which allow people to lift themselves up.

Our state department now recognizes that the progress of U.S. efforts in Afghanistan has fallen back because, in part, we have failed to address these kind of issues. Neighboring Pakistan increasingly may face thorny issues because of the hiding or harboring or unwillingness to address the issue of terrorists taking cover in it’s border regions and it’s ongoing disagreements with India, including the conflict over Kashmir. The fate of Afghanistan and Pakistan are intertwined in many ways, so it is interesting to note that, according to The Boston Globe, on Friday, Clinton met with a group of visiting female Afghan legal professionals.

The fourteen judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys were in Washington on a State Department training program on justice reform in Afghanistan. According to the State Department, Clinton praised the women’s “bravery and courage” for bringing reform to Afghanistan and reaffirmed President Obama’s commitment to stabilizing Afghanistan.

Clinton has long standing credibility and ties with women’s groups both in the United States and abroad, certainly ever since she declared in Bejing in September 5th, 1995, “women’s rights are human rights.” I believe she will use these human resources to help achieve America’s goals and the goals of women everywhere.  And we applaud her for it.



Women

Clinton starts working the phones to U.S. allies – CNN.com.

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has phoned a slew of leaders since taking office on Thursday, reaching out to key allies in the Middle East, Asia and Europe as the Obama administration reviews foreign policies.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announces her new Middle East envoy on Thursday.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announces her new Middle East envoy on Thursday.

Clinton, who was sworn in Wednesday, has spoken with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni and Defense Minister Ehud Barak, as well as Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Jordan’s King Abdullah and the foreign ministers of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, according to acting State Department spokesman Robert Wood.

The calls were “introductory” and did not delve into the nuances of Middle East policy, despite a simmering crisis in Gaza and Thursday’s naming of former Sen. George Mitchell as a special envoy to the Middle East.

President Obama said Mitchell will help implement a cease-fire between Israelis and Hamas and support anti-smuggling efforts to prevent the latter from re-arming.

But he added, “Lasting peace requires more than a long cease-fire, and that’s why I will sustain an active commitment to seek two states living side by side in peace and security.”

By naming Mitchell as his personal envoy, Obama is sending a diplomatic heavyweight to the region.

“He’s neither pro-Israeli nor pro-Palestinian,” Martin S. Indyk, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel, told The New York Times. “He’s, in a sense, neutral.”

Clinton also spoke with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and India’s foreign minister, Wood said. Video Watch a former secretary of state discuss Clinton »

On Friday, Clinton met with a group of visiting female Afghan legal professionals.

The fourteen judges, prosecutors and defense attorneys were in Washington on a State Department training program on justice reform in Afghanistan.

The State Department issued a statement about the meeting late Friday. It was not on Clinton’s public schedule, and Wood did not mention the meeting at his daily press briefing when he discussed the secretary’s second day in office.

According to the State Department, Clinton praised the women’s “bravery and courage” for bringing reform to Afghanistan and reaffirmed President Obama’s commitment to stabilizing Afghanistan.

At her confirmation hearing, Clinton also pledged to focus more attention on women’s issues, especially in Afghanistan.

On Thursday, Obama and Clinton named Richard Holbrooke, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, as a special representative to Afghanistan and Pakistan. Holbrooke negotiated the 1995 agreement at Dayton, Ohio, that ended the war in Bosnia.

Holbrooke called his latest mission “a very difficult assignment.”

“Nobody can say the war in Afghanistan has gone well, and yet, as we speak here today, American men and women and their coalition partners are fighting a very difficult struggle against a ruthless and determined enemy without any scruples at all,” he said after his appointment was announced.

Holbrooke said, “If our resources are mobilized and coordinated and pulled together, we can quadruple, quintuple, multiply by tenfold the effectiveness of our efforts there.”

Amid an administration review of North Korea, Clinton also spoke to the foreign ministers of Japan, South Korea, China and Australia — key allies working to disarm Pyongyang, the spokesman said.

She also spoke with the foreign ministers of India, Britain, France, Germany and the Czech Republic, which holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, Wood said.

advertisement

The administration is also reviewing policy toward Iran, with Obama promising more engagement. Wood said that Undersecretary William Burns would be seeking input from Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia, partners in the so-called “P5 plus one” group dealing with Iran’s nuclear program. Video Watch Obama discuss the need for greater diplomacy »

Sources said Dennis Ross, a Mideast peace envoy for previous administrations, will be an envoy in charge of engaging Iran, but it is unclear what role he’ll play.

All Abo

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

There’s More Fat To Be Chewed With Ophelia

A Fireside Chat with Ophelia.

The New Agenda, a non partisan group which seeks to advance women’s rights has this to say about its the weekly call-in show for members and guests of The New Agenda,, hosted by Amy Siskind. :

Thank you to those of you who joined us for our first week of Chewing the Fat with Ophelia.  The show was a resounding success with callers from PA, OH, FL, IN, NM, WI, MN, NJ and NY buzzing in to let their hair down and chew some fat!

Please join us tomorrow night, Monday, October 20th from 10-11 p.m. EST for our second show.

“It’s getting bad out there. The news seems to go from bad to worse. The sexism is running rampant. The economy is a mess. Our political system seems corrupt. With so much anxiety, upset, fear and just plain outrage, we need to be there for each other! The format will be open. Please call with your questions, concerns, or just to vent. Hopefully we can all feel a little better after an hour together, and maybe even learn a thing or two along the way!

This is a new kind of radio: internet podcasting. The “radio” is your computer – all you have to do is go to the website when the show is scheduled to start, and the show will play right there on your computer screen. (You do have to have your computer speakers turned on!) There’s also a telephone number for you to call in and talk to the host or ask a question, just like with traditional radio shows: (347) 324-5942. Plus, there’s a chat room feature too, so you can “chat” with other listeners while you’re listening to the show. And if you miss the live broadcast, a recording of the program is automatically stored right there on the page so you can listen to it later.

CHEWING THE FAT WITH OPHELIA

The call-in number is (347) 324-5942. Join us!

The New Agenda, Team
New Agenda, Media Alert

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Chewing the Fat with Ophelia – Or – What’s A Podcast, Sister?

Chewing the Fat with Ophelia : The New Agenda.

A fireside chat with Ophelia fireside chat with Ophelia.

The New Agenda , a non partisan group, believes the country is going through a real rough patch and we need to be there for one another.

Enter Ophelia.

Ophelia is here to listen and understand – not judge.

She asks: Can we talk?

The New Agenda,  is launching a podcast so we all have a place to vent, share our stories and possibly get some answers.  They explain : “This is a new kind of radio: internet podcasting. The “radio” is your computer — all you have to do is go to Blog Talk Radio when the show is scheduled to start, and the show will play right there on your computer screen. (You do have to have your computer speakers turned on!) There’s also a telephone number for you to call in and talk to the host or ask a question, just like with traditional radio shows: (347) 324-5942. Plus, there’s a chat room feature too, so you can “chat” with other listeners while you’re listening to the show. And if you miss the live broadcast, a recording of the program is automatically stored right there on the page so you can listen to it later.

We’ve been reading the emails and comments from around the country and it’s clear: people want and need to vent! Call in and tell Ophelia what you’re feeling. Sisters need to help sisters in this difficult time.

Our first show is Monday, October 13, 2008, from 10pm to 11pm EST. The call-in number is (347) 324-5942. Join us!

We should also mention that Ophelia knows a thing or two about the economy. If there’s something that you have heard or read, and you don’t understand it, ask Ophelia.”

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Imagining Ourselves: Global Voices from a New Generation of Women

Provinces of Sri Lanka. My own creation, based...

Image via Wikipedia

Advancing Women In Leadership Journal » Book Review: Imagining Ourselves: Global Voices from a New Generation of Women.

“Harvard graduate student, Paula Goldman, stumbled across an idea one morning – to send an Internet question out to the world “What defines your generation of women?” The idea gathered pace. Out of some 3,000 responses, the international editorial team picked 105 submissions from women living in 57 countries, including some well-known activists, artists, athletes, writers, musicians, photographers, and community organizers.

The resulting book, Imagining Ourselves‘ essential underlying communication platform is the Internet – the invitation to contribute to the book was sent out via the Internet, and the responses apparently were also compiled over the Internet – it is a collection of digital conversations. The book also complements a virtual web-based “living” conversation – as the International Museum of Women’s President invites readers, “The Imagining Ourselves project combines this inspiring anthology with an online exhibit and gathering place where you can participate in conversations about topics important to you … at the International Museum of Women’s website

The book’s contributors share a common profile. They are middle to upper middle class, and in some cases, members of the ruling elite. The latter include Queen Rania of Jordan, Karenna Gore Schiff (Al Gore’s daughter) and Nurual Izzah Anway, (daughter of Malaysia’s former Deputy Prime Minister). The majority of the contributors have had access to superior education, technology, and, by extension, the global market. These are women with a high degree of mobility, freedom to express, and ability to articulate their opinions and issues.

Reading through the contributions, it is apparent that the digital world is impacting women’s observations about and interactions with the world around them. Yee-Ming Tan, for instance, pursues a conventional corporate career following her studies in Malaysia, Australia and New Zealand. After her travels in Tibet she reflects that the main difference between women of the Tibetan community and her is “the digital distance”. Unlike Tibetan women who operate within their immediate environs, her support network is “thousands of miles away, I am in contact via the telephone, the Internet – with my sister in Paris, my friend in New York and my Mum in Malaysia”, she writes, “we are connected to our wider support group digitally over a great distance”.

Jess Loseby – an English artist uses the Internet as her main medium. She works on both small intimate online installations and large-scale digital projections and video. Jess is wheel chair bound, a mother of three and the Internet is an important source of information and inspiration for her artistic work. Pireeni Sundaralingam, born in Sri Lanka, educated at Oxford and living in the US, says, in reference to the Sri Lankan civil war, “thanks to advances in communication technology – there has never been such a chance for us to grasp, at a grassroots level, the similarities of our respective struggles and to build bridges between all our struggling communities.”

The author of this book review, Nidhi Tandon, laments the clear disparity in incomes between those in the West and those in emerging nations.  The income disparity and the digital divide have a clear impact on which women’s stories come to be told. Also, and perhaps as a result, the author notes:

“I was missing any critical references to women and their relationships with earth, water, resources and energy. A couple of lone voices from Bolivia and Micronesia, celebrated community, traditional wisdom, seeds, plants, food and biological diversity itself. This may have been one of the downsides of relying entirely on the Internet as a source of “diversity” of women’s stories.

This book reminds me of Women in the Material World, a book published ten years ago by the Sierra Club, which portrayed media, culture and consciousness through the eyes of women in their contexts across the world. The 256-page photojournalist book captured the myriad lives of women around the world through unfiltered lens, displaying significant material disparities among women across the world. Ten years later, Imagining Ourselves is published, this time a direct expression by the contributors themselves – and through the particular lens of literate and digitally connected women.”

Paula Goldman, Director of Imagining Ourselves

For the full review go to Advancing Women In Leadership Journal » Book Review: Imagining Ourselves: Global Voices from a New Generation of Women.

For more go to Advancing Women In Leadership Journal

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

BlogTalkRadio interview with Amy Siskind : The New Agenda

BlogTalkRadio interview with Amy Siskind : The New Agenda.

We thought you might want to hear more from the co-founder of The New Agenda., a new non-partisan group for women’s rights.

Amy Siskind, co-founder of The New Agenda

Amy Siskind, co-founder of The New Agenda

“On September 10 our own Amy Siskind was the guest on Tommy Christopher’s Unusable Signal on BlogTalkRadio.
Amy talked with co-hosts Tommy Christopher and Tom Fitzsimmons about the founding of  The New Agenda and explained the group’s non-partisan mission and goals.

We’ve excerpted a few snippets from the hour-long interview to share here. Just click on each link to transform it into a tiny little in-line mp3 player” — to listen, go to The New Agenda.

( Disclosure – I am also a co-founder of The New Agenda, a group characterized as a “big tent”, with members having a whole range of different idealogies but joined in their commitment to women’s rights.  So I guess it would be fair to say, like all members of The New Agenda, I am a committed supporter of women’s rights and the goal of advancing women…. as if that weren’t perfectly clear to all who follow AdvancingWomen.com and this blog.  However, the reason I will be following and reporting on The New Agenda from time to time, is because the group has formed and taken a bold, activist and leadership role in protecting and advancing women’s rights in multliple venues and on many levels. For women everywhere, this should be extremely newsworthy and relevant to their lives.   If you have comments or feedback, agree or disagree, we invite you to share your thoughts )

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]