Blogs from Layli Maparyan - ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř /WCW-Blog-Bloggers/Authors/Lmaparyan Fri, 02 May 2025 22:20:52 -0400 Joomla! - Open Source Content Management en-gb Leaping Headlong into 2024 /entry/leaping-headlong-into-2024 /entry/leaping-headlong-into-2024 Dear Friends of WCW:Happy New Year! I hope that your winter break was restful and rejuvenating. With a wrap on 2023, we leap headlong into 2024 with a sense of renewal and openness to what lies ahead. Our 2023 Research & Action Report highlighted some of our accomplishments from the previous year, as well as some of the new projects we are just starting. From our work to evaluate Planned Parenthood’s new sex ed curriculum to a new study of what home-based child care providers need to survive, we are excited about what is on the horizon—including a project that’s particularly close to my heart.At the end of this week, I’ll be traveling to Liberia to train student intern data collectors for the Higher Education for Conservation Activity (HECA), a program funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). My role on this project is Gender Equality and Social...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 03 Jan 2024 12:30:33 -0500
In WCW's Work in Liberia, Sustainable Development Must Be Inclusive Development /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/In-wcw-s-work-in-liberia-sustainable-development-must-be-inclusive-development /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/In-wcw-s-work-in-liberia-sustainable-development-must-be-inclusive-development Last month, while Massachusetts endured a gray, chilly January, I found myself deep in the Liberian rainforest. With a colleague from the University of Georgia (UGA), I visited two forest-dependent communities in the Liberian interior, and spoke with a wide variety of people there about their needs, challenges, expertise, and aspirations. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has awarded $5 million to a team of institutions, led by UGA, to implement a program called Higher Education for Conservation Activity (HECA) in Liberia. Its purpose is to develop a bigger, stronger conservation-oriented forestry workforce there. WCW is one of these participating institutions, and this is our first project in the environmental arena. Liberia is a country I have been working in since 2009, mostly in the gender and higher ed arenas. This project is actually no different, because WCW’s role is to coordinate the aspects related to gender equality and social...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 21 Feb 2023 11:07:07 -0500
As Title IX Turns 50, Looking Back and Looking Ahead /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/As-title-ix-turns-50-looking-back-and-looking-ahead /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/entry/As-title-ix-turns-50-looking-back-and-looking-ahead You may know Title IX as the law that opened the floodgates of girls’ and women’s sports in the U.S. That’s true and incredibly important, but it’s so much more than that. Title IX is the federal civil rights law that prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in any school or education program that receives funding from the federal government. It has impacted areas from sexual harassment and gender-based violence to the rights of transgender students. And in fact, the law continues to be interpreted in new ways that offer protection to more people. Researchers and activists are pushing Title IX to new frontiers, and it’s exciting to be part of those efforts as we celebrate the law’s 50th anniversary this month. Research scientists and project directors here at the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř have long been involved on the front lines of Title IX. In 2005, Senior Research Scientist...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 07 Jun 2022 16:08:49 -0400
Moving Forward from a Year of Sacrifice /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Moving-forward-from-a-year-of-sacrifice /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Moving-forward-from-a-year-of-sacrifice Happy New Year from all of us at the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř! This is a moment of profound reflection about all we’ve been through and where we are headed. 2020 was a year like no other. From out of nowhere came a global pandemic that left no one untouched. Many of us, myself included, were visited by the strange new sickness known as COVID-19. Many of us endured the loss of loved ones whose lives were cut short by a virus we barely understood, but thanks to scientists working around the clock and around the world, the genome was quickly mapped, its elusive symptoms were painstakingly documented, and life-saving therapies and vaccines were developed and tested in record time. In many respects, this was a year when we learned what we were capable of as one human race writ large. Yet, it was also a year when we...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 05 Jan 2021 10:03:03 -0500
A New Era of Compassion and Unity /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-new-era-of-compassion-and-unity /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-new-era-of-compassion-and-unity We at the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř are starting our week with a sense of hope and possibility. We are proud to have a new President-Elect who has the courage to put gender equality, social justice, and human wellbeing first. We share these values, and we’re excited to move forward together to make them a reality in the United States. One hundred years after women won the right to vote, and 55 years after the Voting Rights Act abolished laws that disenfranchised Black Americans, President-Elect Biden chose a woman of color, of Indian and Jamaican descent, as his running mate. Little girls across the country who see themselves in Vice President-Elect Harris now know that they, too, can reach the White House. Representation matters, and it moves the needle on gender equality and racial justice. In his acceptance speech on Saturday night, President-Elect Biden spoke about compassion and unity. We know...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 09 Nov 2020 14:57:43 -0500
Voting as an Act of Community: Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the 19th Amendment /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Voting-as-an-act-of-community-celebrating-the-100th-anniversary-of-the-19th-amendment /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Voting-as-an-act-of-community-celebrating-the-100th-anniversary-of-the-19th-amendment Women in academic dress marching in a suffrage parade in New York City, 1910. Source: Schlesinger Library; Photographer: Jessie Tarbox BealsOne hundred years ago today, the 19th Amendment was ratified in the U.S., granting women the right to vote. This anniversary is something to celebrate, and a time to look back with pride on how much women have accomplished. The fact that it falls this year – in the midst of a global pandemic, a reckoning with systemic racism, and arguably the most consequential election season of our lifetimes – also feels significant. Perhaps it’s an opportunity to reflect on what these times have taught us about the meaning of voting, and what we should keep in mind as November approaches. This year in particular, we are reminded that voting is not just a personal act. It is an act of community, of stepping into the public sphere, of showing that...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 17 Aug 2020 06:24:38 -0400
Placards of Hope, Placards of Change: A Reflection in Response to the Killing of George Floyd /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Placards-of-hope-placards-of-change-a-reflection-in-response-to-the-killing-of-george-floyd /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Placards-of-hope-placards-of-change-a-reflection-in-response-to-the-killing-of-george-floyd The callous killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25 by a uniformed police officer while on duty and while being filmed by bystanders was arguably the most brazen act of police brutality involving an unarmed Black civilian since the Black Lives Matter movement began. What this act demonstrated was that those who are hell-bent on asserting white supremacy and upholding its racist regime are now afraid of nothing and outside the moral community. The mass demonstrations calling for justice and the widespread expressions of solidarity with Black people and racial equality that have erupted in recent days show clearly that the balance of public opinion and power is shifting towards a multiracial coalition of people who embrace the oneness of humanity as well as the end of racial prejudice and racial inequality. In the long run, racial equality will prevail because it is the truth about human beings, but,...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 02 Jun 2020 09:51:46 -0400
WCW's Response to COVID-19 Outbreak /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Wcw-response-to-covid-19-outbreak /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Wcw-response-to-covid-19-outbreak During this unprecedented time, our work at the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř towards gender equality, social justice, and human wellbeing has taken on new meaning. As a society, we have become newly aware of just how fragile and precious human wellbeing is. And as an organization, we have been reminded of how deeply we care about the physical and mental wellbeing of our community — our research scientists, project directors, administrative staff, and supporters like you — as well as the larger global community to which we all belong. The ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř transitioned to working remotely along with the rest of ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř College in mid-March, per the guidance of the Massachusetts Department of Higher Education and Department of Public Health. We will continue to pursue our high-quality research, theory, and action programs remotely for as long as is necessary to protect the health and wellbeing of our staff. We...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 24 Mar 2020 18:01:56 -0400
Highlights from a Decade of Research and Action /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Decade-of-research-and-action /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Decade-of-research-and-action ]]> Women Change Worlds Wed, 08 Jan 2020 16:32:13 -0500 Women’s Equality Day: Still Seeking a Century’s Worth of Progress /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Women-s-equality-day-still-seeking-a-century-s-worth-of-progress /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Women-s-equality-day-still-seeking-a-century-s-worth-of-progress The long march towards progress is often one that extends across generations. The U.S. woman suffrage movement, which resulted in women’s right to vote with the 19th Amendment in 1920 – took 75 years to produce the desired result. That’s three generations of women, each playing a specific role in getting that policy objective to the finish line. Along the way, there were movements and side movements and countermovements, all of which shaped the ultimate contours of that social justice victory. We’ve now gone 99 years past the ratification of the 19th Amendment – that’s almost four generations – and women’s equality is still far from realized. Thus, on this Women’s Equality Day, it seems most fitting to me, as we stare into the century mark of this milestone, that we make a full-court press to fast-track some gender equality moves that would signal a bona fide century’s worth of progress....

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 26 Aug 2019 09:19:07 -0400
Canada Steps Out Front on Funding Feminist Futures Worldwide /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Canada-steps-out-front-on-funding-feminist-futures-worldwide /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Canada-steps-out-front-on-funding-feminist-futures-worldwide This week, Canada launched the Equality Fund, the world’s largest global fund for women’s and trans* equality movements. Its tagline, “Funding Feminist Futures,” clearly conveys the fund’s purpose. Having already mobilized $100 million worth of initial investments to accompany a $300 million multi-year funding award from the Government of Canada, the consortium-led fund is slated to mobilize at least $1 billion over 15 years. Members of this consortium include the MATCH International Women’s Fund, the African Women’s Development Fund (AWDF), Calvert Impact Capital, the Canadian Women’s Foundation, Community Foundations of Canada (CFC), Philanthropy Advancing Women’s Human Rights (PAWHR), Toronto Foundation, Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), Yaletown Partners, World University Service of Canada (WUSC), and Oxfam Canada. This diverse collaboration reflects a holistic and strategic multi-sectoral approach to ending gender inequality sustainably around the globe. Leading feminist funders are expressing enthusiasm and characterizing the Equality Fund and as a monumental move forward....

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 05 Jun 2019 09:30:14 -0400
Seeing the Wealth in People: The Power of Youth in Liberia /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Seeing-the-wealth-in-people-the-power-of-youth-in-liberia /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Seeing-the-wealth-in-people-the-power-of-youth-in-liberia

Recently I returned from Liberia, which USA Today just rated as the poorest nation in the world. It was a bittersweet trip, because Liberia is a land I love, and it wasn’t always at the bottom of this list. And yet, over the ten years I have been connected to Liberia—through work to advance women and higher education, as well as through marriage and family—and particularly over the last year, I have witnessed changes in people’s fortunes, for better and for worse. Liberia is a small country of about 5 million people—not much bigger population-wise than Greater Boston, where I live now, and not much bigger land-wise than where I came from, namely, the state of Georgia. It is the kind of country where “almost everybody knows each other” and a person—from villager to government minister—is never more than a few degrees of separation from anyone else. It is the kind...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 20 Feb 2019 15:33:10 -0500
Boldly Moving Forward Together in 2019 /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Boldly-moving-forward-together-in-2019 /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Boldly-moving-forward-together-in-2019 Happy New Year! This year we are celebrating something very special, WCW’s 45th anniversary! It was 1974 when we first began as the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř Center for Research on Women in Higher Education and the Professions—a feminist think tank on a Seven Sisters campus, begun by a forward-thinking women’s college president, Dr. Barbara Newell. We had the opportunity to hear from former President Newell last September, at the launch of the WCW oral history project, and she told the story of why she pushed for a feminist research center at ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř College during the early 1970s. An economist by training, Dr. Newell was keenly aware of the power of data to move the needle on social issues by influencing policymakers and practitioners, giving advocates and activists the evidence they need to make the case for social change, and contributing new knowledge to academics and the general public alike. Dr. Newell...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 08 Jan 2019 12:47:42 -0500
Let’s Put the Humanity Back into Human Rights /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Let-s-put-the-humanity-back-into-human-rights /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Let-s-put-the-humanity-back-into-human-rights

Thich Nhat Hanh, the Vietnamese Buddhist monk nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1967, famously characterized the human mind as a storehouse filled with two kinds of seeds: good and bad. Humans have the capacity to be both good and evil, he pointed out, and it’s the seeds we water that ultimately grow. Think about that.  When we look around the world today, we see a lot of evil sprouting up all around, and we wonder where it came from. We scratch our heads, we point fingers, and sometimes, in frustration, we join in the fray. Based on Thich Nhat Hanh’s insight, we should really take a closer look at how we are watering the seeds of the very evils we decry and detest – incivility, hate-based conflict and violence, and even basic intolerance. Human Rights Day on December 10 gives us the opportunity to...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 06 Dec 2018 11:52:27 -0500
Justice, Peace, and Wellbeing /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Justice-peace-and-wellbeing /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Justice-peace-and-wellbeing   At the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř, we envision a world of justice, peace, and wellbeing for women and girls, children and youth, families and communities, in all their diversity around the world. Like so many, our will and spirits have been tested by recent events, but our resolve has been strengthened. The fatal shooting of two African Americans in a Jeffersontown, Kentucky, grocery store; the more than a dozen pipe bombs sent to CNN and prominent progressive political leaders and supporters across the country; and the mass shooting of eleven worshippers at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, are evidence that we need to stand strong and work together—to provide comfort, hope, knowledge, and power — to help shape a better world. We at WCW stand with those whose lives are forever changed. Only when social equity and equality, psychological wellbeing, peace, and freedom from violence and want evince...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 29 Oct 2018 16:07:12 -0400
On the 30th Anniversary of Emily Style’s “Curriculum as Window and Mirror” /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/On-the-30th-anniversary-of-emily-style-s-curriculum-as-window-and-mirror /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/On-the-30th-anniversary-of-emily-style-s-curriculum-as-window-and-mirror This week, the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř celebrated the 30th anniversary of Emily Jane Style’s influential essay, “Curriculum as Window and Mirror”, first published in 1988 in the Oak Knoll School monograph, Listening for All Voices, and, in 1996, distributed more widely in the journal Social Science Record. This important critical, yet accessible, analysis of the limitations of a culturally one-sided curriculum made an important intervention on classroom culture and pedagogical praxis. Style’s introduction of the “windows and mirrors” metaphor helped educators to see that students and teachers needed to see both others and themselves in the curriculum and in the classroom. Indeed, this essay drove home the point that education should be about both “scholarship on the shelves” and “scholarship in the selves.” “Curriculum as Window and Mirror” became a foundational document of the National SEED Project, founded by Peggy McIntosh in 1987, which Style co-directed with McIntosh for its...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 05 Oct 2018 16:21:05 -0400
Reflections on Charlottesville /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Reflections-on-charlottesville /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Reflections-on-charlottesville

Why has it been so hard to eliminate racism in the United States, despite concerted and valiant efforts, ever-growing numbers of people of goodwill, lots of good thinking about the issue, and some clear-cut progress and gains over the years? As a researcher and director of the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř, a research institute with a demonstrated commitment to gender equality, social justice, and human wellbeing in all its forms, including ending racism, my mind turns more to questions than answers today, in the wake of what happened in Charlottesville this past Saturday, August 12. Questions I am asking include things like: What are we doing that we think is working but which actually isn’t working? What do we need to do that we aren’t doing that would actually work? Which of the things we are actually doing do work and just need more time or more people involved? And, in...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 14 Aug 2017 16:09:53 -0400
Year-End Reflections: 2016 /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Year-end-reflections-2016 /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Year-end-reflections-2016 2016 was an intense year. The Wall Street Journal’s Year in Review captured the feeling quite well with this headline: “The World Order in Flux.” It has felt that way not only in the geopolitical sphere, but also in the ecological sphere and the psychological sphere. It has been a year of wild ups and downs, surprises both good and bad, and looming unknowns. I don’t really think that this year was an exception, however; rather, I think it is reflective of an accelerating trend. I don’t expect 2017 to be any less eventful or easier on the soul. Rather, I think this year has – and next year also will – require everything we have to steer the world aright. But steer we must! There’s no letting go of the wheel or the reins! The year was dominated by election politics, the plight of refugees, the horrors of war and...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 29 Dec 2016 11:10:18 -0500
November 9th Reflections: Through Harriet Tubman’s Eyes /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/November-9th-reflections-through-harriet-tubman-s-eyes /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/November-9th-reflections-through-harriet-tubman-s-eyes

We have a new President-Elect. For many of us, on either side of the aisle, it is not what we expected. My daughter cried when I told her, not just because she is a girl, but also because she is an immigrant. She is scared, and I, as her mother, had to reassure her that life will go on and that we will be okay even if there will be new challenges. It occurred to me that this is the attitude that I must carry forward, not just at home, but in my work, life, and leadership. It is the attitude that many before me have maintained, against the face of obstacles and conditions as hard or harder than what I am facing now. Like Harriet Tubman, I must “follow the drinking gourd” and keep my sights on the North Star of my aspirations. The biggest gift I can offer at...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 09 Nov 2016 08:42:27 -0500
What’s Next: Coming Together /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/What-s-next-coming-together /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/What-s-next-coming-together

Since voting this morning, all I have been able to think about is the next four years. Without even knowing yet who is going to win, my mind has already jumped ahead. What do we want the next four years to be like? What can we do to make them be the way we want them to be? The negativity of the last 18 months has been excruciating, and I know it doesn’t represent the best of who we are. I want better for all of us! Indeed, as executive director of the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř, whose mission is to advance gender equality, social justice, and human wellbeing, these concerns have been at the forefront of my thinking. How can we ensure that the times that lie ahead lead us closer to these ideals? Today we plant the seeds of the next four years with our thoughts, emotions, and actions....

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 08 Nov 2016 14:28:48 -0500
The New $20 Bill: A Victory for Women, or, Happy about Harriet! /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/The-new-20-bill-a-victory-for-women-or-happy-about-harriet /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/The-new-20-bill-a-victory-for-women-or-happy-about-harriet

One of my favorite footnotes in the world appears at the bottom of the first page of the Combahee River Collective Statement in the first edition of Home Girls: A Black Feminist Anthology on page 272. It reads, “The Combahee River Collective was a Black feminist group in Boston whose name came from the guerrilla action conceptualized and led by Harriet Tubman on June 2, 1863, in the Port Royal region of South Carolina. This action freed more than 750 slaves and is the only military campaign in American history planned and led by a woman.” As a Southern Black woman now living in greater Boston, I have in my travels back and forth driven across the Combahee River many times, moved by the small highway sign that unceremoniously identifies this historically significant waterway. It has become a kind of sacred place to me, over which I always say a silent...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 25 Apr 2016 16:31:29 -0400
The Right to Research: How Data Helps Women’s Human Rights around the World – The Case of West African Market Women /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/The-right-to-research-how-data-helps-women-s-human-rights-around-the-world-the-case-of-west-african-market-women /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/The-right-to-research-how-data-helps-women-s-human-rights-around-the-world-the-case-of-west-african-market-women

Dr. Comfort Lamptey and Layli Maparyan

This past November, I had the opportunity to visit Ghana as a member of the international research advisory committee for a study on West African market women that was sponsored by the African Women’s Development Fund, Ford | West Africa, and the Sirleaf Market Women’s Fund (full disclosure: I’m a member of the SMWF board). This sweeping study, in which over 500 women from four Anglophone countries--Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone--were interviewed, was the first ever to examine market women’s contributions to economic and social development in West Africa, particularly from the perspective of the market women themselves. Five researchers--a coordinating lead researcher, Dr. Comfort Lamptey, plus one researcher for each country--collected and analyzed the data, and we were convening in Ghana for a validation workshop to which national government officials, UN operatives, NGO leaders, funders, and market women leaders had been invited to discuss the results and formulate next...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 09 Dec 2015 14:10:39 -0500
A Global View on the Research-and-Action Connection: Ending Gender-Based Violence in Ghana /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-global-view-on-the-research-and-action-connection-ending-gender-based-violence-in-ghana /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-global-view-on-the-research-and-action-connection-ending-gender-based-violence-in-ghana

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“16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence” is an annual campaign sponsored by UN Women to raise concern about violence against women and girls and to highlight efforts at its eradication around the world. It commences on November 25th, International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, and terminates on December 10th, Human Rights Day. It just so happens that I was in Ghana at the beginning of this year’s campaign. While my visit required me to sacrifice Thanksgiving with my family back in the States, I came home so grateful for everything I had learned and all of the people I had met that I really want to share some highlights, in the interest of the collective movement to end gender-based violence around the world, of which the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř is a part. WCW Council of Advisors member Abigail Burgesson and WCW Executive Director Layli Maparyan with...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 07 Dec 2015 14:11:48 -0500
A World AIDS Day Hero: Beatrice Achieng Nas /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-world-aids-day-hero-beatrice-achieng-nas /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-world-aids-day-hero-beatrice-achieng-nas

December 1st is World AIDS Day. This year, I’d like to shine the light on someone whose work I really admire, someone who is dedicating her life to serving and lifting up many children and families who have been affected by HIV/AIDS. I’m talking about Beatrice Achieng Nas, founder-director of Pearl Community Empowerment Foundation (PCEF), and the Rural Girl Child Mentorship Project (RGCM). I first met Beatrice when she came to the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř (WCW) from her native Uganda as an IREX Community Solutions Fellow (CSF). CSF fellows are selected to come to the United States from developing countries [WC] for showing exceptional promise as community leaders. In the U.S., they train with host institutions to increase their leadership and management experience so that they can carry it back to their home countries and power up their own initiatives. Before coming here, Beatrice had already been developing both PCEF...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 01 Dec 2015 09:35:54 -0500
Maggie Tripp: Firebrand Feminist in a Peck & Peck Suit /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Maggie-tripp-firebrand-feminist-in-a-peck-peck-suit /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Maggie-tripp-firebrand-feminist-in-a-peck-peck-suit

Maggie Tripp (1921-2014) was a trailblazer with a special connection to the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř. Known for her impeccable appearance in Peck & Peck suits (who remembers these??) when everyone else was dressed in jeans, she was an “improbable” feminist whose indomitable spirit and can-do attitude attracted her to the women’s movement early on and whose wise and witty speaking ability allowed her to become what the Long Island Newsday described as “the respected mouthpiece of the women’s movement.” In 1974, she published a forward-looking edited volume titled Woman in the Year 2000, with provocative chapters by authors ranging from Gloria Steinem, Bella Abzug, and Letty Cottin Pogrebin to Alvin Toffler. In 1988, she donated her extensive feminist book collection to the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř Center for Research on Women (as we were then called), after it was rejected by her own alma mater, the University of Pennsylvania. Her donation established the...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 10 Sep 2015 21:56:36 -0400
The Power of Women’s Social Science Research in Social Justice Movements /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/The-power-of-women-s-social-science-research-in-social-justice-movements /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/The-power-of-women-s-social-science-research-in-social-justice-movements

When most people think about how social change happens, the role of social science research probably isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. Yet, our histories of social change, social movement, and social justice have been shaped by social science research that provided crucial evidence to move things along. As head of the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř, the nation’s oldest and largest academic women and gender focused research and action institute, now celebrating its 40th year, I’d like to talk about the role of social science research by women in advancing gender equality, social justice, and human wellbeing by highlighting three studies by women that really made a difference. In the late 1930s, Mamie Phipps Clark, a masters student in psychology at Howard University, began to wonder about the relationship between school context and racial self-concept in children. She devised a method of testing children’s racial self-concept using, first, black...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 04 Mar 2015 09:40:05 -0500
Black History Month Matters: A Personal Reflection /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Black-history-month-matters-a-personal-reflection /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Black-history-month-matters-a-personal-reflection



When I was a girl, my grandmother Jannie had only two books in her house. One was the Bible, and the other was Carter G. Woodson’s The Negro in Our History. My grandmother was born in 1917 in a sleepy little town called Locust Grove, Georgia. Not far from there, her own grandmother, Phyllis, had been born into slavery and was about 12 when the Emancipation Proclamation set her free. Phyllis gave birth to Laura, my great-grandmother and namesake, and Laura, as the result of a quietly kept sexual assault during her time as a domestic worker in Locust Grove, gave birth to my grandmother, Jannie. In the early 1930s, Locust Grove didn’t have a high school for Black students due to Jim Crow segregation, so my grandmother left Locust Grove with the proverbial “nickel in her pocket” to move in with her much older stepbrother and his wife in Atlanta....

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 03 Feb 2015 09:55:22 -0500
On King Day, Thinking about Social Movement /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/On-king-day-thinking-about-social-movement /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/On-king-day-thinking-about-social-movement

The past year has generated national and international soul searching on the theme of social movement. In the U.S., events as diverse as the multiple police shootings of unarmed Black men, the killings of police officers on patrol, domestic violence incidents involving professional athletes, and misogynistic serial killings of women, have left us wondering who we are as a nation. Around the world, events such as the mass kidnapping of African schoolgirls, the shootings of journalists in Europe, and the rise of religious extremist violence in general, have shocked and outraged us. Many people are wondering what forms of mobilization can be effective in today’s world. We scratch our heads over the fact that, while obvious progress has been made on many social justice fronts, new and worse hate-based acts of violence – indeed, new horrors – seem to crop up every day and everywhere. There is a tendency, quite natural...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 19 Jan 2015 12:03:23 -0500
Brave New Girls -- a timely repost /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Brave-new-girls-a-timely-repost /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Brave-new-girls-a-timely-repost

Let’s Celebrate U.N. International Day of the Girl by Supporting the Malala Yousafzais of Our World This article was originally posted on October 11, 2012 on the Women Change Worlds blog. Today, Malala Yousafzai, was named a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. She has also been awarded the National Youth Peace Prize, the Sakharov Prize, and the Simone de Beauvoir Prize. I’ll bet that when the Taliban decided to fire their guns at 14-year old Malala Yousafzai, it didn’t occur to them that they might be making her the cause celebre of the U.N. International Day of the Girl, which is October 11th. Although the Taliban might argue otherwise, Malala is everything a girl should be – intelligent, inquisitive, bold, brave, and a concerned, aware world citizen. She embodies and dares to live up to that oft-repeated maxim, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” What does it say...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 10 Oct 2014 15:05:06 -0400
In Memory of Maya Angelou /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/In-memory-of-maya-angelou /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/In-memory-of-maya-angelou

Today we lost a Phenomenal Woman writ large and a national treasure, Dr. Maya Angelou, at the age of 86. Last year on April 4, 2013, we cross-posted a birthday tribute to her extraordinary life here on Women Change Worlds and at the blog page of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights Voices of our Community Blog. In honor of her passing, and in honor of phenomenal women everywhere, we are re-posting this blog again today.    Happy Birthday Maya Angelou! We may remember today many ways, but one of the happiest has to be by wishing an ebullient “Happy Birthday!” to one of America’s living national treasures: Dr. Maya Angelou, who was born on this day, as Marguerite Ann Johnson, in 1928.  In the 85 years since then, she has graced our nation and the world with wisdom, vivacity, courage, and splendor as the very embodiment of the...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 28 May 2014 14:47:22 -0400
A Different Kind of Resolution /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-different-kind-of-resolution /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/A-different-kind-of-resolution

This time of year, many people are thinking about their New Year’s resolutions. More often than not, these resolutions revolve around things we’d like to change in ourselves or our lives. But what about the things we’d like to change about our world--the things that are bigger than ourselves and our own individual lives? This year, I’m advocating for a different kind of resolution--a resolution to connect ourselves to “the change we’d like to see in the world” through direct action in areas we have the power to influence. I’m convinced that, if enough of us did this, we would turbo-charge not only efforts towards social justice but also human well-being on a vast scale. Are you ready to see where you can plug in?? Those of us who work at social change organizations, like us here at the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř, perhaps have it easiest because our very livelihood...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 06 Jan 2014 11:05:03 -0500
Reflections on the March on Washington, Part II /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Reflections-on-the-march-on-washington-part-ii /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Reflections-on-the-march-on-washington-part-ii

Part II: Social Scientific Perspectives on Making Change in America Yesterday, in my reflections on the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, I blogged about how the issue of pursuing change can be viewed through a social science lens--not just through a political or philosophical lens. The social scientific approach is to gather data and marshal evidence in ways that demonstrate why change would be beneficial or what kinds of actions help us get there. Today, I focus on some social science-related insights resulting from my own reflections on the March, indeed, on the whole civil rights movement and today’s human rights movements, with reference to the work we are doing here at the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř. Here are just a few of the social-science based social change insights that come out of our work here at the Centers: The importance of education in remaking...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 30 Aug 2013 14:01:11 -0400
Reflections on the March on Washington /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Reflections-on-the-march-on-washington /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Reflections-on-the-march-on-washington

Social Scientific Perspectives on Making Change in America Yesterday I attended the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington with two members of the WCW staff. We had been in Washington, D.C., for a series of meetings--indeed, we had just met with a liaison to the White House Council on Women and Girls earlier that morning--and we wanted to be a part of this history. The fact that my own mother had been a civil rights activist in the early 1960s was part of my inspiration to attend this event and share in the national moment on reflection on how far we had or hadn’t come in terms of meeting the deeply enshrined American ideals of equality and justice. During the flight home, as I reviewed the day’s remarks by three U.S. Presidents-- Carter, Clinton, and Obama--vis-à-vis the poignantly articulated and enduring dream of Martin Luther King, Jr., I began to...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 29 Aug 2013 14:33:17 -0400
Happy Birthday Maya Angelou! /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Happy-birthday-maya-angelou /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Happy-birthday-maya-angelou

This blog was originally published on the National Center for Civil and Human Rights Voices of our Community Blog. We may remember today many ways, but one of the happiest has to be by wishing an ebullient “Happy Birthday!” to one of America’s living national treasures: Dr. Maya Angelou, who was born on this day, as Marguerite Ann Johnson, in 1928.  In the 85 years since then, she has graced our nation and the world with wisdom, vivacity, courage, and splendor as the very embodiment of the figure she made famous in her poem, “Phenomenal Woman.”  On a day that encourages us to reflect on civil and human rights with the widest possible scope, we can use this occasion to look closely at the many ways that Dr. Angelou has blazed paths, opened doors, and enlarged life and living for the rest of us. Dr. Angelou is perhaps best known for...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 04 Apr 2013 15:51:25 -0400
Lean In to Social Change /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Lean-in-to-social-change /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Lean-in-to-social-change

One of the things I like best about Sheryl Sandberg’s new book, Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead, is something she says on page 9. Addressing the debate about whether the key to increasing women’s access to power lies in removing “internal barriers” or “institutional barriers,” she writes, “Both sides are right. So rather than engage in philosophical arguments over which comes first, let’s agree to wage battles on both fronts. They are equally important.” I couldn’t agree more. As the Executive Director of the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř, a social-change oriented women-and-gender research and action institute that works on both sides of the coin--systemic factors and individual factors--when it comes to issues of gender equality and women’s and girls’ wellbeing, I know--and WCW has known collectively for nearly 40 years--that these issues exist both because of what society has set up as unfair parameters and because of...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 20 Mar 2013 11:41:29 -0400
Is A Global Consensus Emerging on Women’s Issues? /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Is-a-global-consensus-emerging-on-womens-issues /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Is-a-global-consensus-emerging-on-womens-issues

As we hurtle towards the conclusion of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in 2015, some of which have more or less been met and others of which remain very far from target, there seems, at least based on the most recent United Nations on the Commission on the Status of Women (UN CSW a/k/a CSW57) meetings, to be something of an emerging global consensus about women’s issues. First, there is now a nagging sense that eradicating violence against women and girls (VAWG) is “the missing MDG.” In fact, Michelle Bachelet, the Director of UN Women, stated this forcefully in her opening remarks at the 57th UN CSW last Monday. “Ending violence against women is the missing MDG that must be included in any new development framework. We need a stand-alone goal on gender equality with gender mainstreamed across all other goals.” Bachelet’s statement also indicates a growing international consensus around women’s...

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Women Change Worlds Mon, 11 Mar 2013 15:40:55 -0400
Missive from the 57th UN CSW /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Missive-from-the-57th-un-csw /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Missive-from-the-57th-un-csw It’s International Women’s Day, and I’ve spent the last week attending the annual meetings of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) – for the first time. As a starry-eyed youngster who used to collect pennies for UNICEF every Halloween when other kids were collecting candy, I always dreamt of being involved with the U.N. in some way. Now, here I am, representing the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř in its capacity as a nongovernmental organization (NGO) with consultative status at the CSW under the banner of the U.N.’s Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). It has been an eye-opening experience – one filled with a mix of awe and inspiration, counterbalanced by a healthy dose of critical reality checks.   My week began at the opening session of this 57th CSW, which was presided over by Her Excellency Madame Marjon V. Kamara, Ambassador of Liberia to the United Nations...

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Women Change Worlds Fri, 08 Mar 2013 10:53:20 -0500
Ending Violence – A New Year’s Challenge /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Ending-violence-a-new-years-challenge /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Ending-violence-a-new-years-challenge

I can’t remember a time when our holiday season was more marred by violence than the one that just passed. Not only did the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shootings take place just days before Christmas (and in the middle of Hanukkah) in Newtown, CT, but there were also at least three other mass shootings in December (Happy Valley, OR, Frankstown Township, PA, and Webster, NY) – two of them seemingly “copycat” affairs. As if this weren’t enough, there were also mass shootings in October (Brookfield, WI), September (Minneapolis), August (Oak Creek, WI, and College Station, TX), July (Aurora, CO), May (Seattle, WA), April (Oakland, CA, and Tulsa, OK), March (Pittsburgh, PA), and February (Norcross, GA, and Chardon, OH) – making 2012 one of the most violent years on record for this kind of horror in the U.S. In fact, the whole thing became personal for me three days after the Sandy...

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Women Change Worlds Wed, 02 Jan 2013 15:49:31 -0500
The Next Four Years: Electing Ourselves as Agents of Change /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Electing-ourselves-as-agents-of-change /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Electing-ourselves-as-agents-of-change

Now that we’ve had a day to reflect on the U.S. presidential election results, it’s time to get back to the business of changing the world for women and girls, their families, and communities. We have the election to thank for bringing to light a growing gender gap in terms of the kinds of issues women and men are concerned about, and we would do well to study this more deeply. During the campaign season, “women’s issues” included not only the right to abortion, reproductive freedom and justice, and access to contraception, but also jobs, pay equity, education, health care, violence against women, and even, sadly, rape. And I can’t begin to name all the issues that didn’t even make it to the table of discussion. We were reminded, yet again, that we still have much work to do to make our nation – not to mention the world–a place that...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 08 Nov 2012 14:06:35 -0500
Brave New Girls /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Brave-new-girls /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Brave-new-girls

Let’s Celebrate U.N. International Day of the Girl by Supporting the Malala Yousafzais of Our World I’ll bet that when the Taliban decided to fire their guns at 14-year old Malala Yousafzai, it didn’t occur to them that they might be making her the cause celebre of the U.N. International Day of the Girl, which is today – October 11th. Although the Taliban might argue otherwise, Malala is everything a girl should be – intelligent, inquisitive, bold, brave, and a concerned, aware world citizen. She embodies and dares to live up to that oft-repeated maxim, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” What does it say about us when the global war on women – the ages-old attempt to keep women down through violence, silencing, discrimination, and worse – stoops down to attack young girls who haven’t even yet reached womanhood? I say “us,” because, on some level, we are...

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Women Change Worlds Thu, 11 Oct 2012 10:08:31 -0400
Welcome to the Women Change Worlds Blog! /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Welcome-wcw-blog /WCW-Blog-Women-Change-Worlds/Welcome-wcw-blog "A world that's good for women is good for everyone." Welcome to Women Change Worlds, the new Director’s Desk blog of the ĆŢÓŃÉçÇř. At WCW, also known as the Centers, we do research, theory, and action that promotes justice and wellbeing for women and girls, their families and communities – and we’ve been doing it since 1974. This year, 2012, marks our official entry into the blogosphere, where our goal is to speak up and shape conversations – national and global, regional and local – that impact our core constituencies and the multiple contexts in which their lives unfold. Here at WCW, our motto is “A world that’s good for women is good for everyone.” But what exactly does “a world that’s good for women” look like? The truth of the matter is, there are worlds within worlds, and a world that’s good for women acknowledges women’s similarities...

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Women Change Worlds Tue, 09 Oct 2012 08:27:27 -0400