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Horn
22nd May 2016, 08:40 PM
From rape to disasters, climate change a threat to women



Women's organisations - and funders - are increasingly seeing climate change as a root cause of women's problemsBy Stella Paul

COPENHAGEN, May 20 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Carla Lopez remembers the first time she heard a suggestion that climate change was a factor leading to the rape of young girls.

"I was in Santa Maria Xalapan of Guatemala when a group of women said young girls were being kidnapped and raped because there was a water crisis. It was a revelation," said the executive director of the Fondo Centroamericano de Mujeres (http://fcmujeres.org/en/nuestra-organizacion/), a women's fund based in Central America.

In the indigenous Xinca society of Xalapan, men often kidnap and rape young girls before marrying them, Lopez said, and for about a decade, the local women's group had been campaigning to end this trend.

But in the last two years, groundwater was becoming scarce, because of weather changes and increased mining in the region. As women and girls had to walk further to fetch water, the number of kidnappings and rapes more than doubled over that period, local women said.

"The group of young women came to us and said that they were going to campaign for women's and girls' access to water, because that was the main reason behind the rise in rapes and kidnapping. So we provided them a grant of $15,000 that was usually reserved for climate projects," said Lopez, who spoke at this week's Women Deliver (http://wd2016.org/) conference in Copenhagen, which for the first time had a strong focus on climate change issues this year.

Globally, a growing number of women's organisations are beginning to draw connections to climate change in their work, said Juliana Velez of the Women's Environment and Development Organization (WEDO (http://wedo.org/)), a global network of over 100 women's organisations working on climate change and women's issues.

That is both because organisations increasingly see how issues such as worsening disasters, increasing migration or lack of water disproportionately affect women, and because many organisations have their eye on a share of a promised $100 billion a year in international funding to address climate change by 2020, experts said.

LOOKING AT THE ROOT CAUSES

In the past two to three years, Velez said, about a quarter of their partners have begun to address climate change in their work, including some large organisations such as the Asian Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women in Malaysia, Population Action Integration in Washington and the Fondacion Cayetano Heredia, a health research organisation in Peru.

"From security issues such as rape, beating and molestation to health issues such as miscarriages and hemorrhage or early deaths of mothers, women organisations are beginning to look more at the root cause and finding climate change as the root cause, or a cause worsening the situation," she said.
That has led to a growing number of funding organisations giving cash not just to address threats to women, but also to focus on the climate change issues underlying them.

But getting climate cash for women's issues- and vice versa - isn't always easy, said Laura Garcia of the Sociedad Mexicana pro Derechos de la Mujer (SEMILLAS (http://semillas.org.mx/index.php?lang=es)), one of the organisations which gives such linked-up grants.

"We have a simple but strict criterion: you must have project with a human rights approach, a clear gender perspective, that has women at the lead and can lead to gender equality. But, most of the proposals that we receive fail to incorporate all of these," said Garcia, of the Mexico-based group.

Women's concerns also are getting a limited focus in efforts to curb climate change, experts said. Statistics from the Global Environment Facility (GEF) suggest that of the total project proposals on curbing climate change submitted to the GEF in 2014, only 18 percent addressed gender issues.

Lopez doesn't think the effort to link up threats to women and threats to the climate is simply an "attempt to grab the money" that is becoming available to deal with climate change.
Women's organisations "are shifting to climate change because they see the reason as genuine, not because that is where the money is", she said.

MAKING THE LINK

The problem facing many women's groups in securing funding, she said, is that many do not know how to describe clearly the climate connection to their project - even though the links are there.

Efforts to build the capacity of women's groups to seek climate finance will be important, Lopez and Garcia said. They urged the international Green Climate Fund - which is expected to handle a large share of the coming flow of climate cash - to work closely with regional "green" grant giving organisations.
"Local funders have the access to the local organisations, and understand their needs, their vulnerabilities, and a framework for releasing the finances. So a partnership with them can not only be logical, but also beneficial to all," Garcia said.

(Reporting by Stella Paul; editing by Laurie Goering :; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate)

http://news.trust.org/item/20160520144607-yi719/

cheka.
22nd May 2016, 08:46 PM
submit to the global government/taxation scheme

for the children

Joshua01
22nd May 2016, 09:06 PM
The stupid continues....

Horn
23rd May 2016, 12:33 AM
More Liberal Nazis burnin any non-religious material...

Portland public schools ban textbooks that cast doubt on climate change
The Portland Public Schools board voted last week to ban any materials that cast doubt on climate change, the Portland Tribune (http://portlandtribune.com/sl/307848-185832-portland-school-board-bans-climate-change-denying-materials) reported.
According to the resolution passed May 17, the school district must remove any textbooks and other materials that suggest climate change is not occurring or that says human beings are not responsible for it.
“A lot of the text materials are kind of thick with the language of doubt, and obviously the science says otherwise,” said Bill Bigelow, a former Portland public school teacher who worked to present the resolution. Bigelow says textbook publishers are yielding to pressure from fossil fuels companies. “We don’t want kids in Portland learning material courtesy of the fossil fuel industry.”
One commenter to the Portland Tribune story responded to the news, saying, “I have never seen a case for homeschooling more clearly put forward. This is further proof that public schools are not interested in education, only political indoctrination.”
A petition, meanwhile, circulated by the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine (http://www.oism.org/pproject/)(OISM) currently lists nearly 32,000 signers, including 9,000 Ph.D.s, who say, “there is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth's atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural plant and animal environments of the Earth.”
Still, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says addressing the issue of global warming will help to improve public health, according to U.S. News & World Report. (http://www.usnews.com/news/articles/2016-05-06/taking-on-climate-change-is-key-to-public-health)
"I don't want people to think that EPA is just about big rules, or that climate change is just about polar bears," EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy said. "It really is about direct public health issues like asthma and kids, like cardiovascular and pulmonary disease associated with air pollution."
The Portland decision comes weeks after Yale University announced its climate change program will close at the end of June.
The shuttering follows three consecutive years of budget cuts for the program, which was established eight years ago to conduct climate change research. The impending closure was announced in an email from the institute’s co-directors, geology and geophysics professors David Bercovici and Jay Ague, and reported by the Yale Daily News (http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2016/03/01/climate-change-institute-shut-down/).

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/05/22/portland-public-schools-ban-textbooks-that-cast-doubt-on-climate-change.html?intcmp=hpbt4

Neuro
23rd May 2016, 12:57 AM
In the indigenous Xinca society of Xalapan, men often kidnap and rape young girls before marrying them,

I am astonished by some traditions of courtship that exists in the world. We whites really need to be culturally enriched...

Norweger
23rd May 2016, 05:41 AM
Climate change.. its such a loose term that it can basically mean anything. The four seasons for example or how it gets cold and dark at night and bright and warm in the daytime. They went from global warming to climate change.

"oy vey climate change is confirmed we need to tax you more so we can give the money to immigrants"

Effing social-democrat marxist POS that rule scandinavia.

JohnQPublic
23rd May 2016, 11:02 AM
Well, at least it is no longer Men and Patriarchy... (of course men probably created climate change, you know by building all that civilization and stuff...).

cheka.
23rd May 2016, 11:30 PM
since global warming is now fact, it opens up a whole new legal frontier. if you warm, you are prey