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At the Millennium Summit in September 2000 the largest gathering of world leaders adopted the UN Millennium Declaration, committing their nations to a new global partnership to reduce extreme poverty and setting out a series of time-bound targets, all with a deadline of 2015, that have become known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The Millenium Development Goals are now part of an international development framework which many countries in the Caribbean have signed on to. This paper addresses the question of how the Millenium Development Goals can be made to work to promote gender equality and empowerment in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) region. The analysis here will not be limited to "gender equality and women's empowerment (MDG Goal 3). It will also highlight the gender dimensions of some of the other MDGs that closely related to women's equality and empowerment - as a means and as an outcome. Finally, the analysis and suggestions in relation to strategies "to ensure that gender inequalities are identified and addressed in the MDG monitoring process and in national policy responses from governments" will focus on Caribbean realities. Suggestions are made by drawing on the findings and insights on the linkages between global trends, development strategies (including the macroeconomic policy framework of structural adjustment) and their impact on poor women, and the ways in which we might now approach activist interventions toward the goal of gender equality and women's empowerment.
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Nous sommes un collectif de féministes Noires qui se réunit depuis 1974. Depuis lors, nous avons commencé un processus de définition et de clarification politique, tout en poursuivant notre travail politique dans les groupes auxquels nous appartenions, en alliance avec d’autres organisations et mouvements progressistes. La définition la plus générale de notre politique actuelle peut se résumer comme suit : nous sommes activement engagées dans la lutte contre l’oppression raciste, sexuelle, hétérosexuelle et de classe...
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Série de contributions en hommage à C. Coquery-Vidrovitch, professeur d'histoire contemporaine à l'Université Paris VII et longtemps directrice du Laboratoire Tiers-monde, Afrique. Cinq parties : Savoirs, pouvoirs et écriture de l'histoire africaine ; Ville et urbanisation en Afrique ; Intermédiaires, élites et situation coloniale ; Femmes et genre ; L'histoire de l'Afrique entre passé et présent.
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As part of a larger multi-method study, 15 Black women college students participated in focus group discussions on the body. Contrary to popular theories that propose that Black women are protected by a “Black Culture” that buffers them from negative effects of body representations—thereby leaving them with higher body esteem—the themes that emerged in the focus group discussions indicate that young Black women are indeed feeling (1) pressures to be thin, (2) pressures from the preferences of men of diverse ethnicities, (3) competition with other Black women in the realms of beauty, and (4) a strong sense of being misrepresented by media images of thin Black women. These results not only indicate that body image issues are of real pressing concern to young Black women, but that psychological research methodologies may be adding to the misrepresentation of young Black women and their struggles. Qualitative methods must be utilized in order to hear more clearly the voices of Women of Color.