Global Women's Strike

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Global Women's Strike is a movement that seeks to value all women's work and all women's lives around the world. Many countries (including Guyana, Haiti, the United States, the United Kingdom, India, Italy,[1] Peru, Luxembourg and Ireland) actively participate in this campaign in an effort to grant women justice for their unacknowledged contribution in the labor force.

Background

Poster of a demonstration connected to the 8 March 2017 strike in Turin (Italy).

Women and girls perform nearly two-thirds of the work in most given households. This work includes

military-industrial complex. Over $1 trillion a year is spent on the military worldwide, owing a large portion of this spending to the United States. If 10% of this money was circulated back into the community, it could be used to provide essentials for living: water, basic health care, sanitation, nutrition programs, literacy programs, minimum wage. The Global Women's Strike, which is a result of the International Wages for Housework Campaign started by Selma James in 1972, seeks the recognition and payment for all caring work and the return of military spending to the community through a policy of "Invest in Caring, Not Killing".[2][3]

Goals

The goals of the global campaign are:

References

  1. ^ "8 marzo, sarà sciopero 'globale': donne in marcia in 40 Paesi del mondo", article by Maria Novella Deluca on the 8-3-2107 issue of La Repubblica, see www.repubblica.it
  2. ^ 100 Women: Should mothers get living wage?, 23 October 2013 article on www.bbc.co.uk
  3. ^ "Stop the world and change it: the global women's strike", The Guardian, 7 March 2000.
  4. ^ The No-nonsense Guide to Women's Rights, p. 127; Nikki van der Gaag, Verso, 2004.


External links

Examples around the World