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Priority Areas

Supporting feminist, women’s rights and gender justice movements to thrive, to be a driving force in challenging systems of oppression, and to co-create feminist realities.

Building Feminist Economies

Building Feminist Economies is about creating a world with clean air to breath and water to drink, with meaningful labour and care for ourselves and our communities, where we can all enjoy our economic, sexual and political autonomy.


In the world we live in today, the economy continues to rely on women’s unpaid and undervalued care work for the profit of others. The pursuit of “growth” only expands extractivism - a model of development based on massive extraction and exploitation of natural resources that keeps destroying people and planet while concentrating wealth in the hands of global elites. Meanwhile, access to healthcare, education, a decent wage and social security is becoming a privilege to few. This economic model sits upon white supremacy, colonialism and patriarchy.

Adopting solely a “women’s economic empowerment approach” is merely to integrate women deeper into this system. It may be a temporary means of survival. We need to plant the seeds to make another world possible while we tear down the walls of the existing one.


We believe in the ability of feminist movements to work for change with broad alliances across social movements. By amplifying feminist proposals and visions, we aim to build new paradigms of just economies.

Our approach must be interconnected and intersectional, because sexual and bodily autonomy will not be possible until each and every one of us enjoys economic rights and independence. We aim to work with those who resist and counter the global rise of the conservative right and religious fundamentalisms as no just economy is possible until we shake the foundations of the current system.


Our Actions

Our work challenges the system from within and exposes its fundamental injustices:

  • Advance feminist agendas: We counter corporate power and impunity for human rights abuses by working with allies to ensure that we put forward feminist, women’s rights and gender justice perspectives in policy spaces. For example, learn more about our work on the future international legally binding instrument on “transnational corporations and other business enterprises with respect to human rights” at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

  • Mobilize solidarity actions: We work to strengthen the links between feminist and tax justice movements, including reclaiming the public resources lost through illicit financial flows (IFFs) to ensure social and gender justice.

  • Build knowledge: We provide women human rights defenders (WHRDs) with strategic information vital to challenge corporate power and extractivism. We will contribute to build the knowledge about local and global financing and investment mechanisms fuelling extractivism.

  • Create and amplify alternatives: We engage and mobilize our members and movements in visioning feminist economies and sharing feminist knowledges, practices and agendas for economic justice.


“The corporate revolution will collapse if we refuse to buy what they are selling – their ideas, their version of history, their wars, their weapons, their notion of inevitability. Another world is not only possible, she is on her way. On a quiet day, I can hear her breathing”.

Arundhati Roy, War Talk

Related Content

Twenty years of resistance and essential work in Haiti

Twenty years of resistance and essential work in Haiti

Sometime in 1970, before the death of Haitian President François Duvalier, his paramilitaries stormed, ransacked, and occupied the Port-au-Prince headquarters of La Ligue Feminine d’Action Sociale (The Women’s League for Social Action, LFAS), Haiti’s first women’s rights organization, created in 1934. Moments later, the Ligue’s organizers ran to the site and rescued their archives, which had been dumped on the street. The women dusted off and carried the records back home with them, presumably to rebuild on the feminist work that had been almost scattered.[1]


Twenty-seven years later, after the 1997 coup d’état in Haïti, a group of feminist educators and lawyers started a conversation. They cut through masculinist national concerns around contested elections and state-building in order to discuss the widespread and intersecting issue of gender-based violence in the country. So started Asosyasyon Fanm Soley Dayiti (AFASDA) (“Sun Women’s Association of Haiti”), an action network whose mission was to fill a gap to address violence against women. 

Since then, AFASDA has collaborated with a number of partners to lay down groundwork--including services, campaigns, women’s rights trainings, legal aid, and leadership trainings to support women survivors of violence, in a context where 27% of Haitian women report having experienced physical violence by their husband or another person by the age of 15.

Created as a form of resistance, AFASDA’s mission is to work with Haitian women and girls to advance their overall development, the respect of their rights, and also to contribute to reframing violence against women from a domestic problem to a national one.[2]

The organisation, an AWID member since 2016, has collaborated in an extensive women’s mobilization campaign, and also coordinated a program promoting national dialogue in partnership with community radio stations.

Celebrating their 20th anniversary, strengthened by experience and strategic alliances, the organization pursues its mission and sees new opportunities for women to exercise their full potential and to meaningfully contribute to the rebuilding the country.  

“For example, our most recent success has been the investigation and prosecution of a police officer who sexually assaulted a young student, with a new law that was just passed,” says Elvire Eugène, Executive Director of AFASDA and Cap-Haïtien resident, a city in northern Haiti. 

At the national level, AFASDA is a founding member of the National Coordination for Advocacy on Women's Rights (CONAP) and the Nap Vanse platform. The latter is a member of the National Consultations on Women Victims of Violence, a founder of REFAGNO (Far North Women’s Network).

AFASDA has more than 18 branches across the country, as well as local committees and nearly 3,000 members (composed of women, girls and youth) who participate in decision-making and direction of the work as part of a general assembly.

The organisation is part of the frontline in the fight against gender-based violence (psycho-legal support, awareness raising, etc.). To contribute to the decrease in gender-based violence cases, AFASDA offers legal support to victims, provides temporary housing, organizes discussion and debate seminars and awareness raising activities for the general public. 

“Our work alongside partners contributes to the prevention of violence against women and girls and social reintegration through public awareness raising on violence against women and girls and to legal authorities and other key actors on the difficulties in caring for women victims of violence.” The organization provides women victims of violence with suitable care and facilitates access to appropriate services.     

“We’re also activists, that is to say, we have a responsibility to go into other neighbourhoods to talk about violence. Sometimes we assume people know what violence is but we later realize there are several neighbourhoods where people don’t know what ite is. It’s up to us to go find them and talk to them about violence."

"Because in the office we receive a lot of cases proving that people don’t know what violence is. Sometimes they face it but don’t know where to go. AFASDA represents a point of reference.” 

“That is to say, we’re there to help, to help them recuperate and if there is a misunderstanding with their partner, we have a duty to call the partner too. We send him a letter and when both return to the office, we mediate between the woman and the partner. After repeated visits it’s up to them to hold back.”

The Haitian contingent at the Black Feminisms Forum and the 2016 AWID International Forum consisted of several AFASDA members, including Cathy Elvariste and Myriam Dubuisson, who led a session titled “Toward a Strong Coalition of Women’s Organizations at the Francophone Caribbean Country Level”.  

“The last AWID Forum created new openings and opportunities for us and introduced us to activists from different countries.”

Cathie Elvariste and Myriam Dubuisson facilitating a session at the 2016 AWID Forum

Elvariste and Dubuisson engaged with other feminists from across Africa and the diaspora, creating a transnational pivot to complement their work at home. 

“We hope that the follow-up to the Forum will be effective, that certain actions will be taken and that all countries around the world will engage in the fight for substantive respect for women’s rights.”


[1] For a loving and comprehensive narration on the Haitian women’s movement, see: Sanders, Grace Louise. “La voix des femmes: Haitian Women’s Rights, National Politics and Black Activism in Port-au-Prince and Montreal: 1934-1986”. 2013.

[2] For a perspective on the state of Haitian feminist organizing to end violence against women in the last 25 years, see: Louis, Eunide. “Violences faites aux femmes en Haïti : État des lieux et perspectives”. Haiti Perspectives. Vol. 2. no. 3. Automne 2013.

Region
The Caribbean
Source
AWID