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STATEMENT
AT WORLD URBAN FORUM - 3
Vancouver, Canada
June, 2006
HUAIROU
COMMISSION & GROOTS INTERNATIONAL
Actionable Ideas Developed at Grassroots Women's
International Academy,
led by GROOTS International and Presented by the Huairou Commission
at the World Urban Forum 3
"Women are ever more present
in the struggle to make our cities sustainable. As administrators,
academics, business women, technicians, activists, community members,
and mayors and other politicians, we are involved in the effort
to transform our world."
"We are experiencing an historic moment where many grassroots
women,
marginalized in the past, have been high-impact participants in
this event. "
Prior to WUF, many of us (184 women) participated in the Grassroots
Women's International Academy, representing over 30 countries and
hundreds of thousands of people. There, we learnt from our peers
and will take the exemplary practices home with us to our communities.
Strengthened, we arrived at WUF, to share our expertise with partners
including government representatives, professionals, academics,
different sized NGOs and donors. We interacted, and they listened
to our voices, not as beneficiaries, but as leaders, thinkers, innovators,
teachers and committed people.
If you pay attention to us and include us as equals, we will achieve
the Millennium Development Goals, and much more*.
Based on our experiences, we suggest the following actionable ideas:
1. Consult grassroots and indigenous women
as key experts
Given our longstanding contributions and demonstrated knowledge
and skills in improving the quality of life and building democracy,
grassroots women must be represented as experts in all global, regional
and national dialogues.
The areas of expertise include sustainability, housing and land,
post disaster and conflict recovery, HIV AIDS, caring communities,
and economic development.
Community focused indigenous women and women-led slum dwelling
groups are among the most innovative, yet they are also the least
recognized and consulted.
We pledge our own networks, and call on donors and other partners
to help us mainstream our expertise in upcoming opportunities that
include:
- Global AIDS Meeting, Toronto, August 2006
- Afri-Cities, Kenya, September 2006
- WUF 4, China, 2008
2. Establish new funds for grassroots women's
Peer Exchanges, public spaces and organizing
- Peer Exchanges transfer effective skills and knowledge.
- Grassroots ownership and management of public space sustains women’s
participation in public affairs, from planning and governance.
- Expanding community organizing builds long-term movements.
3. Donor Dialogues: International aid agencies
should schedule dialogues with grassroots women leaders and local
authorities to redirect funds & programs.
Funding to address the HIV AIDS pandemic in Africa is one area
where aid agencies should unite to hold formal consultations with
grassroots women's groups working in conjunction with local authorities
to provide care, treatment and prevention. Global funds have bypassed
the grassroots and established top down processes while claiming
to be participatory and transparent.
Funding priorities and delivery systems, to respond to post disaster
relief and
recovery and to the provision of low-income housing are also skewed
in ways that
limit grassroots women's opportunities and community development.
Grassroots women’s groups have been filling the gaps and
working with their local authorities to access and redirect resources
for effective local problem solving. Donors need to hear these priorities
and approaches and redesign aid streams to reflect them.
4. Support grassroots and local authority
collaborations and Local-to-Local Dialogues to sustain women's participation
in local decision-making.
The Huairou Commission and United Cities and Local Government are
seeking resources for a 3-year joint program to sustain women's
representation in local decision making and stave off burnout and
turnover.
Local to local dialogues are locally designed strategies whereby
grassroots women's groups initiate and engage in on going dialogues
with their local authorities for
- Negotiating issues and priorities
- Joint planning
- Developing on going partnerships
*They should be resourced and replicated.
Event support generously contributed by AECI, American Jewish
World Service, Commonwealth Fund (GROOTS Africa), Cordaid, Ford
Foundation(GROOTS), Government of Canada, UN-HABITAT, AECI and
UNIFEM (Women & Habitat-LAC)
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