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Empower Women, Save Lives: Women and AIDS U.S. TourCountryUnited States RegionGlobal, Africa, North America Programme SummaryIn March 2005, The Global Coalition on Women and AIDS (GCWA) toured five United States cities - New York City, Nashville, Chicago, Miami and Washington, D.C. - to promote education and awareness about the spread of HIV among women, worldwide. Building on the momentum created on World AIDS Day (December 1) 2004, the Coalition launched the "Empower Women, Save Lives" tour, which culminated on International Women's Day. The purpose of the tour was to educate the public and enlist key constituencies to increase support for programmes responsive to the real needs of women and girls. The tour sought to reach businesses, foundations, advocacy groups, religious leaders, academics, the entertainment industry and the media to promote partnerships between local and global communities that would provide effective prevention, care and treatment for women and girls. Communication StrategiesThe "Empower Women, Save Lives: Women and AIDS U.S. Tour" drew on the participation of prominent, "inspiring" women to engage in face-to-face meetings and public events that promoted increasing girls' access to education, reducing violence against women, providing increased economic opportunities for women, protecting women's property and inheritance rights, and ensuring access to female-controlled contraceptive methods. Communication approaches spanning the 5-city tour included: Online advocacy - in the form of a statement of support - enabled individuals to promise to take action "in my community and around the globe. I support solutions that can make a difference and urge all leaders - public and private - to fight AIDS in a way that works for women and girls everywhere..." In this way, information and community technology (ICT) was used to engage members of the global public, even those who were not able to attend the USA-based events. Development IssuesWomen, HIV/AIDS, Development Assistance. Key PointsGCWA notes that nearly 20 million women worldwide are living with HIV. According to Dr. Kathleen Cravero, Deputy Executive Director of UNAIDS (as reported by the Miami Herald on March 6 2005), "Efforts to reach women and girls are a good start but not nearly enough. In many parts of the world, women not only lack information, but also the social and economic options they need to keep themselves and their families safe from AIDS...." GCWA would agree: "In all regions of the world, women are getting infected not only because they lack information, but because they lack the power to keep themselves safe. If more women and girls had the 'right to abstain'; to decide when and with whom they have sex; to negotiate condom use; to live their lives free from violence; to earn incomes adequate to feed their families - their ability to protect themselves from HIV would be real. Far too often, however, they don't." PartnersThe MAC AIDS Fund, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS), the United Nations Foundation, World Vision, the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW), and the American Foundation for AIDS Research (AMFAR). ContactUNAIDS-USA
1825 K Street NW, Suite 701 Washington, DC 20006 USA Tel: (202) 223-7610 Fax: (202) 223-7616 usainfo@unaids.org Empower Women, Save Lives website SourceKaiser Network Daily HIV/AIDS Report, March 7 2005; and Empower Women, Save Lives website. Placed on the Communication Initiative site January 23 2006 Last Updated January 23 2006 |
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