The theme of Women’s Worlds 2011 is “Inclusions, exclusions, and seclusions: Living in a globalized world”. Why? Where globalization and women are concerned, provocative questions abound:

Does globalization include, exclude, and/or seclude women?

As global hierarchies realign, how are gender roles and identities evolving?

How are social identifications like power, privilege, citizenship, and nation affected?

Ours is an increasingly integrated world – one where boundaries are shifting under growing flows of capital, goods, power … and people. Who and where we are as individuals and communities becomes less clear within this contemporary, globalized context.

Around the world, women are grappling with changing political, cultural, economic, social, and environmental realities. And the effects of numerous crises – be they economic, ecological, or health-related – intensify obstacles to women’s equality.

Globalization has contributed to the destabilization and marginalization of women and communities. Yet certain consequences have yielded positive results for women. Globalization has meant enhanced communications and organizing – trans-national connectivity that must be deepened as women’s organizations and networks struggle to sustain themselves and maintain resilience in the face of forces that oppose women's equality.

Women’s Worlds 2011 will be a place for the exploration of these complex matters through reflection, learning, and sharing a variety of ideas and experiences – especially those of women most deeply affected.




http://www.womensworlds.ca/registration
 
This is a link to a blog that we liked called So when does an issue become feminist?

It's written by Jessica Yee who is a multiracial youth of Native descent who was called to the line of action by raising controversy in her Catholic school and began volunteering at Homeward Family Shelter at the age of 12. Now at 23, she is a proud Mohawk young woman whose work has spanned across North America to focus on issues of healthy sexuality, reproductive justice, youth empowerment, and cultural competency, as the founder and director of the Native Youth Sexual Health Network.


Jessica is the 2009 recipient of the YWCA Young Woman of Distinction award. She is currently teaching with the Alberta Society for the Promotion of Sexual Health and is the National Youth Coordinator for the Taking Action Project! Art and Aboriginal Youth Leadership for HIV Prevention.

Find it here: http://www.rabble.ca/blogs/bloggers/jessica-yee/2010/05/so-when-does-issue-become-feminist

 
Is the ‘F’ word co-opted by conservatives & consumerist media? Where are real icons & core values? On The Issues Magazine, Winter 2011, considers feminist icons, feminist values and feminist cons.
The Rise of Enlightened Sexism
by Susan J. Douglas

http://www.ontheissuesmagazine.com/2011winter/2011_winter_Douglas.php
 
Click this link to see a list of the top 35 Amazing Canadian Women by Canadian Living.


http://www.canadianliving.com/life/community/35_amazing_canadian_women_2.php

 
Check out this link for an article criticizing The Girl Effect video, that we all love so much. 

http://aidwatchers.com/2011/01/so-now-we-have-to-save-ourselves-and-the-world-too-a-critique-of-“the-girl-effect”/