00 II. HOW ARE WE BUILDING MOVEMENTS TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND GIRLS? "I call myself a feminist because I believe in the power and soul of women. I don’t have to act like a man or manifest macho tendencies to be accepted in certain contexts. I feel that my rights form part of the whole, and what I chose to be should not be the reason for discrimination.” I s a t o u T o u r a y zine toolbox I. WHAT DOES A GLOBAL SOUTH MOVEMENT TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN AND GIRLS LOOK LIKE? SOURCE Report video Article webpage podcasts webpage “Building momentum against VAWG in the global South” Raising Voices consultation (2018). Taken from Raising Voices website. “The state of our feminist movements” posted on AWID website. “Social Movements, Feminist Movements and the State: A Regional Perspective” by Sunila Abeysekera, ISIS Women website. Feminicidio.net It is a portal of information and data journalism with a gender perspective that draws on the production of reports, interviews, articles, special investigations and reports on feminicide and gender violence in Spain and Latin America. Agenda Series of podcasts on different issues regarding feminisms in Africa. GIRE (Mexico) GIRE has established itself as a leading reproductive rights organization. Since 2011, in addition to abortion, GIRE has worked to put priority issues such as contraception, obstetric violence, maternal mortality, assisted reproduction and work-life balance at the forefront of the debate, from a perspective that takes women’s human rights into account. Brief Article Webpage webpage Toolkit paper Toolkit Toolkit REPORT INFOGRAPHIC ARTICLE WEBPAGE Toolkit Dictionary “10 Essentials for Prevention of Violence against Women” UNWOMEN. Taken from GBVnet webpage. “Get Moving! Transforming Individuals and Organisations” GBV prevention network. Raising Voices – Networks and alliances page. African Feminist Charter, African Feminist Forum. The African Feminist Forum took place from 15 -19 November 2006 in Accra, Ghana. The meeting brought together over 100 feminist activists from all over the region and the diaspora. The space was crafted as an autonomous space in which African feminists from all walks of life, at different levels of engagement within the feminist movement such as mobilizing at local levels for women’s empowerment to academia, could reflect on a collective basis and chart ways to strengthen and grow the feminist movement on the continent. Feminist Organizational Development Tool for the African Feminist Charter, African Feminist Forum. The Feminist Organisational Development Tool is a tool to operationalise the Charter of Feminist Principles for African Feminists. Ain’t I a Woman? A Global Dialogue Between the Sex Workers’ Rights Movement and the Stop Violence Against Women Movement, Bangkok, Thailand, 12-14 March 2009 (2011) “Feminist movement builders dictionary 2nd Edition” (2013) JASS ICTs For Feminist Movement Building Activist Toolkit, Just Associates, Association For Progressive Communications, Women'snet. “Move to End Violence” – movement building resources page. “Co-Creating Fearless Futures: A Feminist Cartographer's Toolkit” AWID. “Brave, Creative and Resilient: The State of Young Feminist Organizing” FRIDA (2016) “#PracticeSolidarity: How we build feminist futures” AWID (2017) “Male feminists inside Uganda's police strike out at killing of women” Thomas Lewton (Reuters, 2018) “We Rise - JASS’ Toolkit for movement building”, Just Associates We Rise was created by Movement Builders for Movement Builders. Drawing on JASS’ work with women leaders, activists and organizations in a range of countries and contexts, we take you behind the scenes to learn from these activists and their movements. By making the dynamic nature of movement building visible and accessible, we hope to encourage and strengthen movement builders everywhere. webpage book chapter webpage toolkit Raising Voices - Training and Mentoring Skills page. “Sisterhood: Political Solidarity Between Women” from Bell Hooks’ Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center, Southend Press 1984. Resources for Resilience, focusing on self and collective care for activists and change-makers. “Where is the Money for Women’s Rights?" A Do-it-Yourself Research Methodology/Toolkit, AWID. AWID offers the WITM Toolkit to support individuals and organizations who want to conduct their own research on funding trends for a particular region, issue or population by adapting AWID’s research methodology. III. REFLECTING ON OUR MOVEMENTS TO END VAWG Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link Link