Building a Women’s Movement in Southern Africa
Great article
For the past few decades, the womens movement in southern Africa has been under scrutiny for having lost its vigor. Back in the 1990s, the movement fought gender inequality in private and public spaces, and many governments listened.
International treaties like the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), also known as the international bill of rights for women, were ratified. Governments reformed laws that discriminated by gender, such as inheritance laws. Womens ministries and gender policies were established.
But a decade later, the power of the womens movement seemed to be waning. While major leaders and activists were brought in by governments to lead the new formations that had been put in place, overall governance structures remained largely patriarchal. The womens movement, now largely driven by civil society and nongovernmental organizations, chose approaches that provided for women without addressing the reasons why women were lacking in the first place.
Tensions grew between old and young activists, with few young women occupying meaningful roles in the movement. Some young women viewed feminism as aggressive and uncomfortable, and did not like being called feminists even if they were involved in womens rights work. Others reported that they were interested in being part of the movement, but there were few entry points to make a contribution. It became clear that the movement had not sufficiently invested in the young womens involvement. Fresh perspectives were badly needed.
In response to these developments, the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa launched the Young Womens Voices Campaign in 2009. The campaign raises the political consciousness of young women and promotes their voices in the womens rights agenda at all levels. Components of the campaign include the Southern African Young Feminist Leadership Course, the Southern African Young Womens Platform, capacity building for young womens networks and formations, and publishing a special issue of BUWA! Journal.
http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/building-women-s-movement-southern-africa