Social Media and Women's Empowerment
17:36 - 13.03.10
At the opening of the Women and Work conference March 8 in Turin,
Italy, Madlen Serban, the director of the European Training
Foundation, or ETF, revealed an ambitious hope for the symposium. She
hoped the event, held 100 years after the first international women's
conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1910, would yield new answers,
rather than just new questions, about women in the workforce in
EU-partner countries, writes Rose Deniz in Hurriyet Daily News and
Economic Review.
A century later, do we really have new answers?
As one of 22 female bloggers invited to a pre-conference workshop by
international communications specialist Silvia Cambie, I set out to
find out.
The invitation came along with the task of addressing three major
issues of concern to the ETF, and to the EU at large - women's
transition from school to work, entrepreneurship and social inclusion.
In the weeks leading up to the conference, questions and thoughts were
shared on the Women and Work Ning group (womenandwork.ning.com), a
virtual hub linking bloggers and writers in Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Croatia, Egypt, Georgia, Jordan, Lebanon, the former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia, Russia, Tunisia and eight more countries.
The day before the keynote address given by Jung Chang, author of
`Wild Swans' and the first person from the People's Republic of China
to be awarded a Ph.D. from a British university, we sat in a large
circle staring out onto a snow-covered terrace and cracked the ice by
doing teambuilding and creativity exercises. Having all met virtually
online, it was time to work together in person.
It turns out we all had something in common besides being mostly
women. (The two male participants had spent a good deal of their
working life trying to solve social problems and gender inequality.)
It wasn't that we were all bloggers, either, because as it turned out,
only a handful of the participants had begun blogging in the early
2000s, while 10 or more had just started this year or were yet to
start a blog. The commonality was that social media had brought us
together.
Through Twitter, Facebook and personal blogs, Cambie curated a group
of people addressing issues of women's empowerment internationally.
Lara Aharonian creates a support network for women in Yerevan at the
Women's Resource Center. Mari Sharashidze in Tbilisi enables women's
access to resources and information. Vedrana Spajic-Vrkas in Zagreb is
stringent about curriculum and how it addresses gender imbalance as a
professor in the faculty of humanities and social sciences. Elena
Fedyashina plays a major role in furthering women business leaders
with the nonprofit partnership The Committee of 20 in Moscow, while
Fatma Mokhtar speaks to issues of equality and egalitarianism as a
researcher for Nazra Association for Feminist Studies in Cairo.
Work groups hashed out tough questions about helping entrepreneurially
inclined women develop self-esteem, and how to de-gender jobs by
focusing on skills rather than sex. I suggested throwing out
elimination of gender-specific language from job postings in Turkey as
a first step.
Tunisian Lina Ben Mhenni, coordinator of the captivating and highly
controversial campaign `We are all Laila,' founded by Eman Abd El
Rahman in Egypt, described herself as a blogger fighting for freedom
of expression in her country. Journalist Jasmine Elnadeem of the
Al-Ahram newspaper commented on specific tasks needed to be done to
enable gender equality: train private and governmental media to
involve human rights in their work and start role-modeling at early
age in schools to spread awareness.
Dining the first night in Turin, I turned to my companion and
discovered she was Armenian, as was the woman sitting next to her.
While chatting about the egalitarianism of Facebook and Twitter,
suggesting that the Internet may be one of the few safe places for
women to reveal their true thoughts, we decided to take a picture: two
Armenian women and one American married to a Turk flaunting our
friendship in the face of Turkey's complaints about the Obama
administration's lack of resolve to block the Armenian Genocide
resolution last week.
As I discovered in Turin, when it comes to the personal, peace and
equality takes precedent over the political. One hundred years later,
there are new answers, but there is also a very important question yet
to be answered: Will policy makers heed our advice?
Tert.am
17:36 - 13.03.10
At the opening of the Women and Work conference March 8 in Turin,
Italy, Madlen Serban, the director of the European Training
Foundation, or ETF, revealed an ambitious hope for the symposium. She
hoped the event, held 100 years after the first international women's
conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1910, would yield new answers,
rather than just new questions, about women in the workforce in
EU-partner countries, writes Rose Deniz in Hurriyet Daily News and
Economic Review.
A century later, do we really have new answers?
As one of 22 female bloggers invited to a pre-conference workshop by
international communications specialist Silvia Cambie, I set out to
find out.
The invitation came along with the task of addressing three major
issues of concern to the ETF, and to the EU at large - women's
transition from school to work, entrepreneurship and social inclusion.
In the weeks leading up to the conference, questions and thoughts were
shared on the Women and Work Ning group (womenandwork.ning.com), a
virtual hub linking bloggers and writers in Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Croatia, Egypt, Georgia, Jordan, Lebanon, the former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia, Russia, Tunisia and eight more countries.
The day before the keynote address given by Jung Chang, author of
`Wild Swans' and the first person from the People's Republic of China
to be awarded a Ph.D. from a British university, we sat in a large
circle staring out onto a snow-covered terrace and cracked the ice by
doing teambuilding and creativity exercises. Having all met virtually
online, it was time to work together in person.
It turns out we all had something in common besides being mostly
women. (The two male participants had spent a good deal of their
working life trying to solve social problems and gender inequality.)
It wasn't that we were all bloggers, either, because as it turned out,
only a handful of the participants had begun blogging in the early
2000s, while 10 or more had just started this year or were yet to
start a blog. The commonality was that social media had brought us
together.
Through Twitter, Facebook and personal blogs, Cambie curated a group
of people addressing issues of women's empowerment internationally.
Lara Aharonian creates a support network for women in Yerevan at the
Women's Resource Center. Mari Sharashidze in Tbilisi enables women's
access to resources and information. Vedrana Spajic-Vrkas in Zagreb is
stringent about curriculum and how it addresses gender imbalance as a
professor in the faculty of humanities and social sciences. Elena
Fedyashina plays a major role in furthering women business leaders
with the nonprofit partnership The Committee of 20 in Moscow, while
Fatma Mokhtar speaks to issues of equality and egalitarianism as a
researcher for Nazra Association for Feminist Studies in Cairo.
Work groups hashed out tough questions about helping entrepreneurially
inclined women develop self-esteem, and how to de-gender jobs by
focusing on skills rather than sex. I suggested throwing out
elimination of gender-specific language from job postings in Turkey as
a first step.
Tunisian Lina Ben Mhenni, coordinator of the captivating and highly
controversial campaign `We are all Laila,' founded by Eman Abd El
Rahman in Egypt, described herself as a blogger fighting for freedom
of expression in her country. Journalist Jasmine Elnadeem of the
Al-Ahram newspaper commented on specific tasks needed to be done to
enable gender equality: train private and governmental media to
involve human rights in their work and start role-modeling at early
age in schools to spread awareness.
Dining the first night in Turin, I turned to my companion and
discovered she was Armenian, as was the woman sitting next to her.
While chatting about the egalitarianism of Facebook and Twitter,
suggesting that the Internet may be one of the few safe places for
women to reveal their true thoughts, we decided to take a picture: two
Armenian women and one American married to a Turk flaunting our
friendship in the face of Turkey's complaints about the Obama
administration's lack of resolve to block the Armenian Genocide
resolution last week.
As I discovered in Turin, when it comes to the personal, peace and
equality takes precedent over the political. One hundred years later,
there are new answers, but there is also a very important question yet
to be answered: Will policy makers heed our advice?
Tert.am