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2000 - Sexism and Globalization, 2000 Good Reasons to March
2003 World Social Forum
A Change of Course, The Millenium Development Goals (MDGs) through the Lens of the Women's Global Charter for Humanity, August 2005
A Score for Women’s Voices
Advocacy Guide to Women's World Demands, 2000
Appeal of the World March of Women for the Construction of a Just, Equal, Cooperative, Democratic and Peaceful World
Changing the World Step by Step, 2000
ECONOMICS IN QUESTION: A WOMEN’S PERSPECTIVE
G8 AND WOMEN: WORLDS APART
Information about demand V-6 concerning sex trafficking of women and girls
Information Document on Lesbian Rights (1999)
Letter to Kofi Annan, UN General Secretary, October 17, 2000
Letter to the IMF and the World Bank, October 16, 2000
Supporting Document 1 to the Charter
Supporting Document 2 to the Charter
The World March of Women 1998-2008: A Decade of International Feminist Struggle
The World March of Women 2010 - Third International Action
WMW at the Global Forum on Financing the Right to Sustainable and Equitable Development
Women on the March, 2002
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April 2002 - Actions to Revolutionize the World
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A Global Women's Speakout
On March 8, 2000, the World March of Women was officially launched around the planet. Women in the Americas, Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Arab world, and Indigenous women explained why they were embarking on this formidable adventure.
In the streets of numerous cities, women demonstrated their support for the launch. Behind all the festive marches featuring giant puppets, carnival masks and multicoloured costumes, the serious work was beginning.
Women's messages
They adopted platforms for their national demands, held training sessions and prepared national actions.
There were various actions leading right up until October 17, 2000, the date chosen for the world actions, coinciding with the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty.
They joined demonstrations to mark events like International Labour Day on May 1, the International Day for Women's Health, in Latin America, Pan-African Women's Day on July 31, and World Rural Women's Day on October 15. Women led national marches and rallies in 50 countries.
During this period women were also busy gathering signatures in support of their demands which were then presented to national decision-makers-an activity at times beset by difficulties. In Turkey, women were arrested on two occasions as they attempted to mail support cards.
Women expressed themselves in a multitude of forms: theatre, dance, song, poetry, a variety of public speaking events, whistling, wailing, banging utensils on empty pots, clapping, slogans, interviews with the media.
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In April 1998, there were 275 participating groups from 54 countries and territories. |
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In 2000, the figure had risen to 6000 groups from 161 countries and territories. Of the 161 countries and territories, 114 had a national coordinating body. |
Among the actions staged, the following were recorded: roughly 50 national marches; 11 provincial rallies; 5 regional meetings and marches; and countless participants in national actions, workshops, conferences, local rallies, etc. |
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Just under 60 coordinating bodies drew up a platform of national demands; there were also 5 regional platforms. |
Approximately 14 of them created March Web sites. |
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The March collected 5,084,546 signatures in support of its demands. |
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Last modified
2006-03-23 03:09 PM
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