Women Protest Gender Violence Globally · Global Voices
7 Articles
7 Articles
Women protest in various parts of the world within the framework of the International for the Elimination of Violence against Women.
Women protest in various parts of the world in the framework of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women. These are some of the demonstrations: Women attended a demonstration in Dhaka, capital of Bangladesh. Credit: AFP Activists dressed in red performed a performance in Rome. Credit: AP Nacional Violence generates rejection, warns CSP on march 25N National Firm Governors pact against gender violence
Even if you don’t believe it, today 25 November marks another “Women’s Day.” Now it’s the “International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.” I know that there was another celebration on 8 March and, surely, the “national” will be held in a few weeks; then we will celebrate the “Mundial” day, then the “Mexican”, then the “state” will come and even, in one of those, the “municipal”. But have they served anything to celebrate these …
November 25 (25N) is the most visible date on the global agenda for the elimination of violence against women. More than just an event, it is a day of memory, denunciation and resistance that has its roots in a tragic event of political and gender-based violence that took place more than six decades ago in the Caribbean. The starting point of this day of action is the Dominican Republic of 1960. The country lived under the oppression of the dict…
The International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women wants to raise awareness of this scourge that affects millions of women in the world, one in three has suffered The post 25N: To say enough to male violence, today and every day first appeared on Junior Report.
On the Day to Fight Violence against Women, Rita Segato, anthropologist, writer and feminist referent from Argentina invites an uncomfortable exercise: to think of gender violence as a political phenomenon, structural and deeply linked to the way in which we understand power. “The patriarchy is not a moral or religious order, it is...
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