• About Us
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Financials
    • Donors
  • What We Do
    • Initiatives
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Coalitions
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Advocacy
    • Amplify
Donate
  • About Us
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Financials
    • Donors
  • What We Do
    • Initiatives
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Coalitions
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Advocacy
    • Amplify
  • Donate

Women's Environment and Development Organization

  • About Us
  • What We Do
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Key Events & Gatherings
  • Financials
+1 212-973-0325[email protected]

DonateContact Us

Privacy Policy/WEDO Policies
Copyright © Women's Environment and Development Organization

Stay Informed

Receive updates on our progress, thinking, and strategies as we advocate for gender-just climate, environment, and economic policies around the world.

Resources
Shutterstock 314269880
Advocacy Brief
Aug 13, 2016
Discussion Paper: Gender Equality and Just Transition
Feminist Systems Change
Share:Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Bluesky

The following discussion paper was drafted by Majandra Rodriguez Acha as a summary of a dialogue hosted by WEDO at the UN climate change negotiations in Bonn, Germany on May 25, 2016. This event explored how the Paris Agreement can be implemented in a just and equitable manner; based on a feminist analysis of a “just […]

The following discussion paper was drafted by Majandra Rodriguez Acha as a summary of a dialogue hosted by WEDO at the UN climate change negotiations in Bonn, Germany on May 25, 2016.

This event explored how the Paris Agreement can be implemented in a just and equitable manner; based on a feminist analysis of a “just transition”. Panelists also provided a review of gender-responsive mandates and decisions under the UNFCCC, and concrete policy recommendations for enhancing gender-just implementation at national and regional levels, particularly with regards to finance provision.

Excerpt from the discussion paper:

A gender just transition must further take into account the role of women’s unpaid care work, particularly in developing countries, as well as women’s informal work, both of which in essence subsidize our current economic systems and are financially unrecognized or undervalued. The precariousness of women’s work is compounded by current trends such as seasonal and forced migration, the feminization of agricultural labor, the lack of formal recognition for women as farmers, the lack of health protections in the informal sector, the transportation of women in Qatar and the Arab peninsula, among others. Women entrepreneurs are also disproportionately represented in small enterprises, which have less access to credit and loans, and in the micro and small informal sector. As feminists in the labor movement denounce, while working conditions in general are poor in many industries, they are often worse for women.

The panel featured:

Bridget Burns, Advocacy and Communications Director, WEDO
Anabella Rosemberg, Policy Officer, International Trade Union Confederation
Liane Schalatek, Associate Director, Heinrich Böll Foundation North America
Majandra Rodriguez Acha, Young Feminist Fellow for Climate Justice, WEDO (Moderator)

 

Share:Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Bluesky

Stay Informed

Receive updates on our progress, thinking, and strategies as we advocate for gender-just climate, environment, and economic policies around the world.

Related Resources
Critical Conversation
Jan 15, 2026
Highlights on Multilateralism: An Interview With Katie Swan-Nelson
Advocacy Brief
Nov 30, 2025
No Tax Justice Without Gender Justice
Insight
Nov 18, 2025
Delivering a Feminist Just Transition with a BAM!

Resources

View All
Interview with Katie Swan Nelson
Critical Conversation
Highlights on Multilateralism: An Interview With Katie Swan-NelsonRead
Advocacy Brief UN Framework Convention on Tax
Advocacy Brief
No Tax Justice Without Gender JusticeRead
COP30
Advocacy in Action
Belém: Feminist Power Delivered — But the Process Failed to Meet the MomentRead
Small Grant Recipients 2025 26
Impact Story
Announcing 2025-26 GEDA Small Grant RecipientsRead
a group of women smiling

Support Our Work

Your donation provides us with the stable foundation we need to build the feminist future we’re working to realize.

Donate Today