Feminists Around The World Call For A Women’s Global Strike On March 8, 2020

#WomensGlobalStrike

 

Chiang Mai, Thailand/New York, USA

In response to unkept promises made by governments to advance human rights, equality, development     and peace for all women, more than 95 feminist organisations from over 36 countries worldwide are calling for a Women’s Global Strike on International Women’s Day, 8 March 2020. The call for the strike reiterates “If women stop, the world stops”, asking women from every corner of the world to stop or slow down their formal, informal or care work and come together to demand women’s human rights.

“On March 8, we will be forging alliance to advocate and reclaim women’s collective power to demand our human rights”, explains Fatima Burnad, founder of the Society for Rural Education and Development and member of Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD), a network of feminist organisations that initiated this strike. “Women will withdraw from formal work and care work. We will not do housework, domestic responsibility, and where necessary ask male partners and allies to show solidarity by taking over responsibilities for home, family and community. We will bring together women and queer allies in our networks and communities to march, to speak out and to come together,” she adds.

We mark 25 years since the commitments made by the world’s governments for women’s rights at the 1995 Fourth World Conference for Women, known as the Beijing Platform for Action. Still, structural oppression against women at the intersection of patriarchy, neoliberalism, globalisation, militarism, fundamentalism and environmental destruction, is persisting and escalating worldwide:

 Women and girls continue to perform more than three-quarters of the total amount of unpaid care work, while domestic work is commonly underpaid and performed under precarious working conditions.

  • Women across the world are paid 63% of the amount that men are paid. The global pay gap will take 202 years to close.
  • 70% of women have experienced physical and/or sexual violence from an intimate partner in their lifetime.
  • 80% of people displaced by climate change are women.

In the light of these staggering inequalities, from Argentina to Indonesia, Serbia to Canada and  Pakistan to Uganda, social movements, communities and organisations around the world have endorsed the strike, uniting women in global solidarity to take action and connect their struggles against systemic inequalities. 

“As domestic workers, we are calling on those women who have suffered violence and harassment at work and have been exploited in many ways, to stand up for their rights, and those women who haven’t experienced such abuses, to mobilise in solidarity”, says Ida LeBlanc, President of the National Union of Domestic Employees of Trinidad Tobago and member of the International Network for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, ESCR-Net.

Common demands of women striking are reflected in a political statement that contains the demands for structural transformations: decent work and living wages; end gender-based violence; just access to resources, power, and opportunity; food sovereignty for all and climate justice.

Who We Are

The demand for a global strike led and owned by women was ignited by feminists, trade unionists and activists at the People’s General Assembly held in 2015, in New York. This call for a Women’s Global Strike on 8 March 2020 has been initiated by the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD), a leading network of over 240 feminist organisations and grassroots activists in Asia and the Pacific.

ESCR-Net – International Network for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, is connecting struggles to escalating the Women’s Global Strike to the global level. ESCR-Net is a global  network that promotes solidarity and collective action to advance a global movement for social justice, and unites 298 organisations, social movements and advocates across 77 countries in five regions.

Additional Resources

  1. Our Political Statement in 8 languages
  2. Our campaign logo
  3. List of upcoming events 
  4. Resources for media dissemination

Follow and Join the Conversation

 Website: www.womensglobalstrike.com

Facebook: @WomensGlobalStrike

Twitter @WomensGblStrike

Instagram @womensglobalstrike

 Press Enquiries

 Neha Gupta, neha@apwld.org (Thailand, English and Hindi)

Esther de la Rosa, edelaroa@escr-net.org (New York, English and Spanish)