New York, NY (March 6, 2017) — WEDO stands in solidarity with the Women’s Global Call for Climate Justice (WGCCJ), who represents over 200 partner organisations around the world and supports the calls for global women’s strikes starting on March 8th, 2017, International Women’s Day.

For some time, several women’s movements have been working towards global strikes, recognising that democratic systems are globally failing to deliver on human rights and development promises to women. For years, elite and patriarchal institutions have been growing and corrupting the implementation of democracy and government by and for peoples. Within that context, and within globalisation, fundamentalisms and militarism entrenched, it is impossible to create urgently needed policies shifts through lobbying advocacy alone. Our global moment requires new forms of action and solidarity and new forms of leadership. When governments fail us, women must lead. Therefore, the WGCCJ will join with the movements for global strikes calling for climate justice, for women’s human rights, for global equality, and for development justice. We will exercise solidarity through our power to withdraw our labour, consumption and consent from the existing system.

Women’s rights and climate justice movements have been calling for ‘System Change, not Climate Change’ for many years.

The current global political and economic reality threatens to strengthen, rather than alleviate, the patriarchal, corporate driven systems that result in human rights violations, obscene levels of inequality and the destruction of our beautiful planet.

As even the small, tokens of progress on climate change agreed in Paris are now threatened, we must elevate our organising efforts, and thus we endorse the call for Global Strikes. We will strike against dirty economies and the political systems funded and powered by fossil fuels.

In the lead up to COP21 the WGCCJ stressed the urgency of addressing the root causes of climate change: a perverse global, extractivist economy. The global dominance of corporate, or neo-liberal capitalism, has resulted in the life-threatening climate crisis while simultaneously increasing inequalities, widespread human rights violations and environmental degradation. This model is disastrous for women, and disastrous for the planet. It is particularly devastating to women in the Global South and women from frontline communities who face the largest threats from climate disruption and who have contributed the least to the crisis.

Rather than tackling these structural drivers of climate change, governments, influenced by powerful corporations, have largely failed to deliver climate justice. Instead they have provided further opportunities for business to profit from climate change. These ‘false solutions’ fail to address unsustainable production and consumption patterns, the inequality of wealth and power between and within countries. They also fail to ensure the human rights of women, Indigenous peoples, workers, migrants, people living in poverty and other impacted communities.

The climate crisis threatens our very existence but it also provides a profound opportunity -an opportunity to address the gendered and colonial origins of our global economy. It is possible to create communities where human rights, gender equality and sustainability prosper. But in order to achieve this, we need governance that is accountable to peoples, not to corporations. We need stronger commitments to global cooperation, not divisive, racist forms of nationalism designed to distract us from the theft of our planet’s resources.

Women’s strikes and solidarity strikes in the past have worked where other forms of advocacy have failed. In 1975, 25,000 Icelandic women gathered in Reykjavik and 90% of the women in Iceland did not go to work and refused to do housework. In 1956, women in South Africa marched to protest amendments to the Urban Areas Act, requiring women of color to carry passes and permits in urban areas. This demonstrated the commitment and resilience of women in the face of a national struggle and the date has now been commemorated as National Women’s Day in South Africa. In 1973, the Australian Builders Labourers’ Federation refused to build a luxury resort on a public park that served as a refuge for the area’s working class. This movement led to a new labour tactic, the “Green Bans”, where unions refused to build on land communities were defending. The union has since refused to construct another 42 development projects that threaten the livelihood of the working class, indigenous communities and the environment.

The Women’ Global Call for Climate Justice endorses the call for a Global Strike on March 8th spearheaded by the International Women’s Strike, a coalition of feminist groups from about 30 countries. Other women’s organisations and movements are joining and echoing the call for Global Strikes. We aim to add the voice of grassroots climate justice movements to those calls and illustrate the connections between climate justice, gender justice, economic justice, environmental justice, racial justice and development justice.

Join us!

Download Statement & Toolkit

To download the Solidarity Statement for the Women’s Global Strike, Click here.

To access the International Women’s Day Global Solidarity Strike Toolkit, Click here.

To access A Day Without A Woman Toolkit, Click here.

Social Media Post Samples

Facebook:

  • I’m on strike in solidarity with women affected by climate change and demanding climate justice. #GobalCall #WomensGlobalCall #WomenClimateJustice
  • Women are the most affected by the impacts of climate change. Today, I join them in solidarity to demand that the root causes of climate change be addressed. #GlobalStrike #WomenClimateJustice #SolidarityforClimateJustice
  • Climate change threatens the survival of many women, in particular, the most marginalized. I stand with them today for a more just future built on climate justice. #GlobalStrike #ClimateJustice #IWD2017 #WomenClimateJustice

Twitter:

  • I strike for women affected by climate change and I demand justice now! #GlobalStrike #ClimateJustice #IWD2017
  • Today I strike for a system change NOT climate change for a better, more equal future for women #GlobalStrike #IWD2017
  • I stand in solidarity with women to demand Feminist Fossil Fuel Free Future #WomenClimateJustice

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Women and girls around the world are demanding and creating systemic change and a sustainable future for all. We need collective power to attain a just future – we need you.