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Grassroots Women's Community Development - HuairouRegion
Global
Programme Summary
The Huairou Commission is a global coalition of networks, institutions, and individual professionals that supports and validates grassroots women's contributions to development, and that links grassroots women's community development organisations to partners, resources, information, political space, and on-the-ground practice. Established in 1996, the Commission works to forge strategic partnerships to advance the capacity of grassroots women worldwide to strengthen and create sustainable communities. Specific objectives include:
Communication StrategiesThe Huairou Commission is working to accomplish its goals through advocacy – local, national and international - as well as network building, capacity building, resource development, and empowerment strategies. A special focus is placed on coalition-building and networking across networks, and forging strategic partnerships for education, advocacy, policy dialogue, and programme alliances. The Huairou Commission's approach to development work is based on a paradigm of collective action that is community-based and led by women. What has emerged is a platform for grassroots women to build their capacity to act locally and to directly represent their priorities in key local, community, and global arenas. Huairou gives visibility to grassroots women's solutions by placing them at the centre of strategic policy dialogues and action planning. Specifically, the Huairou Commission and its Member Networks have developed several methodologies to enable grassroots women to collectively articulate and analyse their successful on-the-ground work in such a way that they can convey their priorities in decision-making forums:
To elaborate on the latter, the network focuses its joint efforts on 5 campaigns, as of this writing (visit the Huairou website for further details): Governance, AIDS, Disaster, Land and Housing, and Peace Building. The campaigns use the empowerment and capacity-building methods developed by Huairou member groups over two decades. Among other methods, they include peer-learning exchanges, leadership support, grassroots women's international academies on different themes, documentation of grassroots practices, and local-to-local governance dialogues. For example, as part of its Governance project, the Huairou Commission, has supported its members' participation in governance by:
One theme that shapes several Huairou strategies and activities is that of claiming space. Based on the belief that "[a]ccess and control over public space reflects the accomplishments of grassroots women's groups and provides a base for their community building activities", the Commission developed an exhibit called "Our Practices - Space" for display at the World Urban Forum III. The Space exhibit was made up of 38 2x2 panels reflecting the accomplishments of 17 grassroots women's groups and highlighting the claiming of space as a critical organising strategy among grassroots women's groups throughout the world. As a follow-up, the Commission is developing a handbook that will feature the 17 groups included in the exhibit as well as 5 to 10 additional groups. Women and Space: Stories of Grassroots Women's Community Centers from Around the World will argue that grassroots women's groups need their own independent community spaces and will demonstrate practical examples of implementation and strategies used by grassroots women. Development IssuesWomen, Rights. Key PointsThe non-governmental forum held in Huairou, China, during the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995 drew 35,000 representatives from non-governmental organisations (NGOs) - the "vast majority of them women....For grassroots women the event was a watershed. For the first time in a major modern international meeting, they spoke for themselves. In the Grassroots Tent, sponsored by a coalition of organizations from around the world, groups of women sat center front and described their local organizations, problems, solutions, campaigns, and demands to their peers and visiting professionals. Implicit in all their comments was an intent to have a say in governing their local, regional and international communities. The Huairou Commission [was] established at the end of ten days of testimony and strategizing in the tent..." In the words of organisers, the Commission "represents a major milestone for grassroots women in building a global movement of self-representation. The self-representation contrasts strongly with the former practice of being represented by intermediary organizations, a number of whom were largely based in the professions and not singularly grounded in the reality of rural and urban poor communities, where the majority of Huairou members live and draw their livelihoods." PartnersMember Networks: Federacion de Mujeres Municipalistas - America Latina y el Caribe, GROOTS International, Habitat International Coalition Women and Shelter Network (HIC-WAS) Africa, HIC Red Mujer y Habitat de America Latina, Information Center of the Independent Women's Forum, International Council of Women, Women in Cities International, and Women and Peace Network. ContactHuairou Commission
249 Manhattan Avenue
Brooklyn NY
11211-4905
United States
Tel: 718 388 8915
Fax: 718 388 0285
SourceWomen's United Nations Report Network (WUNRN) listserv on February 10 2009; and Huairou website. Placed on the Communication Initiative site February 19 2009 Last Updated February 19 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
Special FocusNewspapers and Democracy
How central to democracy are newspapers - some of which are being lost to budget cuts and other changes - as opposed to blogs, YouTube, emails, text messaging, twittering, and the like?
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