Tag Archives: Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women

Women’s Progress in Peril – Help Us Now


 

 

National Women's Law Center

If the final days of the 111th Congress are any clue, you and I have our work cut out for us in 2011.

Earlier this month, 58 Senators voted to bring an important bill, the Paycheck Fairness Act, to the floor of the Senate for a full debate and vote. This measure would help close the continuing and shameful disparity between men’s and women’s wages.

But in highly polarized Washington, 58 votes are not enough. Needing 60, this critical reform died without ever receiving a vote on the merits.

We have fought too long and too hard for women and families to let injustices like this stand.

Please make an urgent contribution to the Center’s year-end campaign — every dollar you donate will be matched dollar for dollar by our Board of Directors, up to a total of $60,000.

It’s a sign of the times that our Board has issued this challenge.

For more than 38 years, the National Women’s Law Center has led the way for women and families — in the classroom, in the workplace and in society as a whole. Our team of experts, lawyers and advocates is a formidable force for women in America today. The coming year will be a tough one, but frankly we’ve been here before — and prevailed. And with your help, we can prevail again.

Here is a glimpse of some of the major challenges that we will take on in 2011, marshalling all of our experience, savvy and skill:

 

  1. Advocate for an economic recovery plan that puts job creation and economy-boosting investments before deficit reduction in the short term. The recession has hit women hard and millions of women, many of them single mothers, are among the long-term unemployed. We will press for jobs and job supports, such as child care, that will help both these women and the economy.

    At the same time, we will advocate for a long-term fiscal plan that protects programs vital to women and their families. We will press for additional revenues from a fair and responsible tax system and fight efforts to balance the budget on the backs of Social Security and Medicare, which have helped millions of women escape poverty and achieve some measure of economic and health security.

  2. Protect health reforms that help women and families. The Center played a lead role in efforts to stop insurers from charging women higher premiums than men. And we shined a bright spotlight on the trauma of women being denied coverage by insurance companies that consider Cesareans and domestic violence to be “preexisting conditions.” Those were critical advances, and we won’t allow the country to go backwards.
  3. Win confirmation of dozens of judges, who are superbly qualified and who await Senate confirmation to serve on the federal bench.
  4. Catch up with the community of nations by ratifying the landmark international human rights treaty for women, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women — CEDAW — ratified by all but the United States, Sudan, Somalia, Iran and three Island countries in the Pacific. Our nation’s presence on this list is simply shameful.

We’re up against what will certainly be one of the most challenging sessions of Congress in recent years, with many more Members hostile to core rights and programs critical to women’s lives. But if we’ve learned one thing in our 38 years, it’s this — that victories are possible even in the toughest of times.

Your support will never make a bigger difference. And between now and December 31st, the Board will match your gift dollar for dollar, up to a total of $60,000.

Please give generously. For women and families everywhere, you have our deepest thanks.

Sincerely, 

 

 

Nancy Duff Campbell Nancy Duff Campbell
Co-President
National Women’s Law Center
Marcia Greenberger Marcia Greenberger
Co-President
National Women’s Law Center

Help Advance the Rights of Women and Girls Worldwide


Advance the Rights of Women & Girls Worldwide
Tell your Senator to support CEDAW and to ask Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman, Senator John Kerry, to put CEDAW on the path towards ratification.

I DON’T believe in the basic rights of women and girls worldwide — the right to live free from violence, the right to go to school, or the right to participate in the political system.

How many Americans would agree with that statement? None that I know — and I’m sure none that you know.

Yet the United States continues to be one of only seven countries in the world that has not ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) — a landmark international agreement that affirms principles of fundamental human rights and equality for women around the world.

It’s time to ratify CEDAW and show that Americans believe in the basic rights of women and girls worldwide.

Today, for the first time in EIGHT years, the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing focused solely on the importance of ratifying CEDAW — a momentous step forward in our push to ratify this important treaty. This hearing will underscore the importance of U.S. ratification of the treaty to strengthen our standing as a leader for women’s rights and human rights, and it’s an important first step towards a full Senate vote on CEDAW. The National Women’s Law Center has been at the forefront of working for the ratification of CEDAW, and today our Co-President, Marcia Greenberger, will testify at the Committee hearing about the importance of CEDAW for women and girls worldwide.

We are within striking distance of CEDAW ratification, but the window of opportunity is rapidly closing. Senator John Kerry (D-MA) is the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the committee with jurisdiction over this international treaty. In order for the U.S. to ratify CEDAW, he needs to use his leadership to move it forward.

We urgently need your helptell your Senators to support CEDAW and ask Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman, Senator Kerry, to move CEDAW forward for a vote.

Sincerely,

Emily J. Martin Emily J. Martin
Vice President and General Counsel
National Women’s Law Center

P.S. Watch Marcia Greenberger testify at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing by tuning in to the live webcast today at 2:00 p.m. EST.