Little did I know when I agreed to represent the League of Women Voters of the United States (LWVUS) at the United Nations (UN) that it would be such a fulfilling 20 years.
One of my primary memories that sticks with me is our work at the Beijing Women’s Conference, a conference convened by the UN in 1995 to achieve global gender equality.
The Relationship Between the League of Women Voters and the United Nations
The League of Women Voters has a long history with the United Nations. In 1944, LWV lobbied the American public to advocate for the UN’s creation, training people to speak on its behalf and distributing over one million resources.
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At the UN’s charter conference in 1945, President Harry Truman invited the League to serve as consultants to the US delegation. Since then, LWV has continued its presence through its “observers” (UN-affiliated NGOs and civil societies who may participate in UN General Assembly work). Review the League’s History with the UN here.
The Working Group on Girls and the Beijing Women’s Conference
When I became a representative in the early 1990s, one of LWV’s priorities was protecting children at risk. My work aligned with this focus; a significant portion of my role, for which I spent 60+ hours a week, centered on forming the Working Group on Girls (WGG), which my League colleague, Margery Cohen, and I helped found.
We formed WGG to lobby government representatives at UN Conferences to include the many unique problems girls face in their documents. This included ways to improve girls’ lives and pledges to do so. As WGG grew, it took on other ways to help girls.
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Our early work was on the Beijing Women’s Conference preparatory meetings. In addition to lobbying the delegates to add wording about girls (and not just adult women) in the document, we held regular caucuses. Luckily, several NGO representatives from across Africa decided that their representatives would also emphasize the girl child in their lobbying. We worked together in our efforts, which made them more impactful.
As a result of these efforts, the Beijing delegates decided to add the girl child as a critical area of focus. Previously, the unique problems of girls had never been considered.
The Conference, attended by LWV Observers, resulted in what has been called “the most progressive blueprint ever for advancing women’s rights,” from the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. I remain proud that our efforts led to the unique needs of girls being included in this document, which is still used by those striving towards a more equal world.
The Beijing Women’s Conference was just one of many events I and my fellow League members could participate in. To read more stories about past, current, and future advocacy, check out:
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Paulette Austin’s blog about her experience and LWV Observers’ work with the Commission on the Status of Women, the NGO Committee on Social Development, and climate action
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This piece on women, girls, and climate change as discussed at the most recent Climate Change Conference (COP27)
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Our recent blog on supporting girls worldwide