From the outset, DAWN’s analysis has included an understanding of the concerns surrounding sustainable livelihoods for women in the global South. More recently, with nature already “answering back” in many places and the margins of ecological survival shrinking, particularly for impoverished communities, we recognise the need to pay greater attention to the health of the planet alongside human rights. In fact, ecological issues cannot be disassociated from women’s rights, including the adverse effects on their sexual and reproductive health, or from political and economic concerns over the inequitable allocation of natural resources. Our intention, therefore, is to develop DAWN’s political ecology analysis based on Southern feminist perspectives and experiences, and conceptually linked to our continuing critique of global trends in the body politics, governance and political economy arenas.
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STATEMENT FOR ENDORSEMENT: We Will Not be Mainstreamed into a Polluted Stream: Feminist Statement on the 2015 Development Agenda, Bonn 22 MARCH 2013

Gita Sen speaking at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji
Links to OWG 6

Women’s Rights in Political Transitions

Entrevista a Corina Rodríguez -economista y feminista
Rio+20 Series: Stop Homophobia and Transphobia
Rio+20 Series: Sex Workers
Major Group Statement: Women, Indigenous People, Trade Unions Delivered by Noelene Nabulivou

Noelene Nabulivou’s statement on behalf of the Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Caucus at CSW57

Palabras de Apertura – Nicole Bidegain (DAWN)

Neo-extractive Realities, Post-extractivist futures: Pacific Women and Feminist Development Alternatives

