Prepared by Flora Partenio
The School of Feminist Economics is a training space to socialise analysis and tools for the construction of critical perspectives on the interrelationships between economic dynamics, gender, class, race and ethnic relations, and the mechanisms of inequality reproduction.
During the last 3 years, DAWN has worked towards a process of collective statements together with political and social organizations, feminist networks, unions and educational organizations based on feminist pedagogies. These spaces have been organized mainly around exchanges in Spanish and Portuguese, such as the production of collective documents, statements, audiovisual productions, publications, training materials and so on. For this reason, most of the materials presented during the first stage of the School are in Spanish.
From the feminist economy perspective, the School of Feminist Economics (SFE) intends to be a space for reflection. Its main themes are primarily focused on the conditions of global financial capitalism, corporate capture, the digital economy, the financing of public policies, the future of work and feminist experiences of resistance. At the same time, it aspires to multiply feminist pedagogies’ training spaces for activists. In the current context of resistance in a fierce world, this will help to strengthen dialogue and the connection between analysis and social mobilization.
The School is coordinated by Corina Rodríguez Enríquez and Flora Partenio, both members of DAWN’s Executive Committee. The first edition of the School of Feminist Economics—”Narratives and resistance to financial capitalism and the power of corporations”—was held within the framework of the “G20/IMF Out! Global Action Week” in November 2018. This experience was building on previous work and collective articulation, including The Peoples’ Summit “WTO Out! Building Sovereignty” and The Feminist Forum Against G20. This initiative was promoted by DAWN and co-organized by a series of feminist organizations from Latin America and the Global South. Subsequently, and within the framework of the World Social Forum of Transformative Economies, DAWN launched the website of the School of Feminist Economics.
The virtual site of the School is a pedagogical space that opens access to training resources and feminist self-training, to share, download audio visuals and disseminate readings that allow for further reflection. The launch of the website retraces the path travelled up to this point with ally organizations and feminist activists from different countries. It is the start of a new cycle of collective work in the face of the challenges of the current scenario marked by the impacts of the pandemic.
In this training and self-learning space, one will find a series of thematic modules focused on analysis from a feminist economy perspective:
- The conditions of development and reproduction of global financial capitalism.
- The modalities acquired by the new international social-sexual-racial division of labour and its effects on working conditions.
- The gender marks of corporate crimes committed by trans-nationalized capital.
- The discussion of illicit financial flows (IFF) and its impacts on gender justice and social justice.
- Critical analysis around the narratives on financial inclusion and labour inclusion of women through the paradigm of “entrepreneurship”.
- The conditions of the global expansion of data extractivist capitalism, digital commerce and platform work.
- Access to and investment in public services, and the financing of public policies in countries of the North and South.
- The articulation of public debt with domestic debt.
- Feminist experiences of resistance against the advance of fascism and racism; feminist practices of autonomy and self-management; the union and feminist organization in the face of the advance of labour reforms.

For content about the school in Spanish see:
La Escuela de Economía Feminista se propone abrir un espacio de formación para socializar análisis y herramientas para la construcción de perspectivas críticas sobre la interrelación entre la dinámica económica, las relaciones de género/clase/raza/etnia y los mecanismos de reproducción de la desigualdad.
The New Normal in Dispute: Transformative Proposals from the Solidarity & Feminist Economy
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Desafíos del orden global: multilateralismo y derechos humanos

La privatización del sistema multilateral y de los Estados Nacionales: el caso de Brasil

¿De qué hablamos cuando hablamos de género y comercio?

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Agenda del G20 y del Women20: aprendizajes y desafíos para la construcción de un nuevo foro feminista

Oral Statement to the CEDAW Committee (Session 70)

Shadow report to the 70th Session of CEDAW: Review of Australia Extraterritorial Obligations

Making history in Argentina: the fight for legal abortion

El movimiento feminista haciendo historia: la lucha por el aborto legal en Argentina

State of Civil Society Report 2018

Open letter to the UN condemning the war on drugs in Bangladesh

Women Resisting Extractivism – Declaration

Towards the Feminist Forum against G20 / Rumbo al Foro Feminista Frente al G20

“Mantener una economía dependiente y abierta es una posición ideológica”, entrevista a Corina Rodríguez Enríquez

Feminist perspectives on the World Social Forum 2018 (English Subtitles)

Perspectivas feministas sobre el Foro Social Mundial 2018 (Subtítulos en español)

Call for international solidarity with the Brazilian people (Español & English)

G20 en la Argentina: los pueblos se organizan para resistirlo

Towards an international binding treaty to protect the world’s oceans

New report: Financing for Development and the SDGs

Broadening Common Heritage: Addressing Gaps in the Deep Sea Mining Regulatory Regime

Civil Society Organisations’ open letter to World Bank on PPPs

Building a sustainable and equitable world, DAWN’s statement at the 4th World Conference on Women
