Category Archives: Feminism

Feminism

Promoting Blogging for Choice

Over on the Guardian’s Comment is Free I had a little promo for the Blogging for Choice day – and got off surprisingly lightly from the commenters – perhaps because there’s such a flood of Davos stuff.

But I do think it is worth saying that such events do have an impact in countering the well-funded and organiser anti-abortion campaigners.

Feminism

Seven-week wait for an abortion!

It seems as a cost-cutting measure, some NHS trusts are making women wait up to seven weeks for an abortion.

Which means, of course, they’ll often go beyond the point where it can be carried out by hormone treatment, and will require surgical intervention, which is, no doubt, more costly…. great decision by the administrators, and a lot of unnecessary strain on the patients.

The Department of Health wants 70% of all terminations to be carried out under 10 weeks gestation. According to its latest figures – from 2005 – the majority of abortions did take place within this time limit.
But the data revealed large regional discrepancies, with the worst performing PCTs carrying out only just over a third of terminations within 10 weeks.

Definitely not an area where you want a postcode lottery.

It is sad that I have to post this on Blog for Choice day – so I should add that we should also celebrate that most women, most of the time in England, Scotland and Wales DO have reasonable access to abortion. (Northern Ireland is another story.)

What we have to do is make sure that access improves – by removing the two-doctor rule. It should, under normal circumstances, be the decision of a woman alone, helped by a nurse, with doctors involved only when medically necessary.

Feminism

Women Against Fundamentalism

To a brilliant meeting yesterday to work towards refounding Women Against Fundamentalism. As the introduction said:

Women Against Fundamentalism is alarmed at the threat to and silencing of trade union, socialist, feminist, anti-racist and other progressive movements – in the mainstream as well as in Black, migrant and refugee communities – by the state’s ‘War on Terror’. It is alarmed, too, by the collusion of elements on the Left with fundamentalist religious leaders who are attempting to undermine rights and freedoms, including in their own communities.

The group was founded in the immediate aftermath of the Rushdie fatwa and worked in the Nineties with groups including Women Living Under Muslim Laws (a still highly active group), the anti-war Women in Black, South Asia Watch (with particular concerns about the rise of Hindu fundamentalism) and Catholics for Free Choice.

It produced an excellent journal – all the articles are on the website and many are still all too relevant.

Now, the aim will be, as one speaker put it, to “bring ideas from diverse places to the crossroads where race and sex and class meet”. The word “nuanced” was used a lot at the meeting – the need to recognise that struggles against racism can’t be allowed to empower repressive forces within minority communities. As another speaker put it bluntly: now if you resist fundamentalism you risk being called pro-imperialist.

(If you are interested in getting involved contact with me – natalieben AT gmail DOT com and I can pass on contact details.)

And talk did turn quite a bit to blogging and other Net 2.0 things – luckily I one half of Stroppyblog was also there – nice to meet you ! – so we could share that around…

Feminism

A new female PM?

According to the Telegraph anyway, Israel is likely to soon have a female prime minister. Its second, of course, the first having been Golda Meir, who played, or at least was portrayed in the classic “Iron Lady” mode. But interestingly the new contender, Tzipi Livni is presenting herself very differently:

Miss Livni has revealed that she has had to struggle against the boys’ club atmosphere at the top levels of Israeli decision-making.
“Sometimes there are guy issues,” she said in a recent interview. Asked if there had been a “guy problem” in the conduct of the Lebanon war, she replied: “Not only in the war. In all kinds of discussions, I hear arguments between generals and admirals and such and I say, ‘Guys, stop it.'”

She is, perhaps inevitably, from the right, but on this account anyway she is appealing to the centre…

Feminism

Spread the word…


Blog for Choice Day - January 22, 2007

“This year’s topic is a simple one: tell us, and your readers, why you’re pro-choice.”

American terminology and focus, but something we all sadly have to keep doing, all around the world.

Feminism Women's history

Marriage: who needs it?

Interesting that trends in the West (latest report out from Australia suggests that the next official figure will put the number of married women at 45% of the total) are being followed by China – where the age of marriage is rising significantly.

Chinese women have been delaying wedlock over the past decade and the average age for a woman to marry is now 24, a research report has found.
Since 1990, Chinese women have married between at 21.9 to 22.8 years old and the age was 22.6 in 2000, says a report published by China Youth and Children Research Center, an institution for helping the government set youth policies.

A cause for celebration – more free women in the world…

And in case you think that is extreme, landing in my inbox this morning is an account of how it used to be, from France in 1772:

The complainant [Marie-Françoise Bertaud, linen merchant in Paris, who is seeking a legal formal separation]… in marrying sir Gagneur, had no other intention that to run her business with her husband as they had agreed. Sir Gagneur, far from performing as he had promised his wife in helping her run her business, a month after their marriage left her and went to live with a girl nicknamed the Hungarian, who was in sir Restier’s troupe of tumblers, at the St-Germain fair.
One evening it got into sir Gagneur’s head to bring his concubine home to sup there; the complainant, his wife, opposed this, not wanting to admit this concubine to her table; the sir Gagneur mistreated his wife in hitting her and then drawing his sword against her…

It goes on with an astonishing familiar tale – hubbie comes and goes, mostly goes, to the Hungarian and a succession of other women (the tally is four illegitimate children with different women, frequently beats and threatens his wife, she tries again and again to make the marriage work.
(From the excellent Sundries.)