Feminine Wisdom Around the World
Below find the Women's eNews and other news about women around the world. There is so much going on - justice that is needed and a lot of good work happening as well
News aggregator
Religious Hospitals Probed for Denying Women Care
(WOMENSENEWS)--Late last year, when a young mother of four came through the doors of St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, Sister Margaret Mary McBride made a difficult decision. The choice she made would turn out to be the definitive one of her career.
Bangladesh Development Star Does Shine for Women
UNITED NATIONS (WOMENSENEWS)--A precocious, gender-sensitive civil society movement stirring in Bangladesh since the 1970s is expected to make the country a star among nations meeting here in September to re-affirm 15-year development pledges that face a deadline in 2015.
Marriage Loses Ground as Anti-Poverty Panacea
WASHINGTON (WOMENSENEWS)--A recent government agency report finding that marriage promotion programs have not helped women escape poverty--a central tenet of welfare policy under President George W. Bush--gives Stephanie Coontz the chance to say "I told you so."
Women's eNews Philadelphia Leadership Awards 2010
Mexico's Distressed-Migrant Visas Reach Few Women
MEXICO CITY (WOMENSENEWS)--When Mexico decriminalized undocumented migration from the nations south of its border through its country two years ago, it also started allowing migrant victims of violence access to humanitarian visas.
However, the visas are rarely issued and the process is so slow it's nearly useless.
Sally Potter's Movies Stand Out in July Retrospect
(WOMENSENEWS)--July's new movies include several superb narrative features and documentaries directed by women. But before we look at those, let's praise Sally Berger, a curator at New York City's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), for putting together a remarkable retrospective (July 7 to 24) of the films and videos of Sally Potter, the brilliant British feminist moviemaker.
Breast Cancer Link to Environment Goes Mainstream
(WOMENSENEWS)--When she looks at her suburban street, Geri Barish sees cancer. She believes it's under her feet, in the soil that came from landfill and has been sprayed with pesticides. She believes it's overhead, in the electric transformers that hang from telephone poles on her quiet cul-de-sac.
Domestics Gain Rights; Iran to Stone Adulterer
(WOMENSENEWS)--
CheersLarsson's 'Hornet Girl' Stirs Summer Book Buzz
(WOMENSENEWS)--Female authors this year have produced something for every type of summer reading, from light, fluffy and popular to feminist tracts and epic literary explorations.
Beyond the Baby Blues
My girlfriend had a beautiful baby boy two weeks ago. Now she's having tearful meltdowns nearly every day.
Wal-Mart Plaintiffs Face Historic Class Challenge
(WOMENSENEWS)--More than one million current and former Wal-Mart female employees alleging gender discrimination stand to be certified this summer as the largest civil rights class action in history.
Sex Crime Expert Asks Gore's Accuser: Why Now?
I'm as fierce an advocate as exists for crime victims, but I'm having a tough time figuring out how to feel about Al Gore being publicly accused now of committing a sexual assault in 2006.
It's not that he didn't seem the "type." After the Catholic priest scandal, I gave up thinking there was a man alive who wasn't capable, though if Jimmy Carter gets in the same trouble I will lose my lunch.
Ethiopian FGM Radio Warnings Reach Nomadic Women
DALLOL, Ethiopia (WOMENSENEWS)--The schoolmaster at Kursawat, a rural area in the Afar region of Ethiopia, is struggling to bring awareness of the benefits of girl education and the risks of female genital mutilation.
Title IX Turns 38; U.K. Cuts Pregnancy Benefits
It's Not Over: U.S. Women Still Die Giving Birth
(WOMENSENEWS)--When I was a kid, my family and I used to make a parlor game out of the question, "What would life have been like if we had lived a century ago?"
It always made for an interesting game, so long as we skipped over the fact that most of us would not have made it into the world in those days.
IT Jobs Offer Growth, But Women Are Bailing Out
(WOMENSENEWS)--Janna Jones (not her real name) used to love her job in the information technology, or IT, industry when she was working in the Washington, D.C., area as a computer analyst. Her company worked on mostly large government contracts.
Threatened Teen Dares Mexico's Migrant Trains
TULTITLAN, Mexico (WOMENSENEWS)--Exhausted from walking long distances the night before, Joyce was sleeping silently on the floor of the migrant shelter here, curled on her side, when a shelter organizer woke her up to tell her story to a reporter.
She was the only woman among roughly 150 men and boys, some as young as 14.
Triple-Neg Breast Cancer Stirs Screening Debate
(WOMENSENEWS)--After Laurie Stewart's boss died of breast cancer five years ago, she and five other women at the funeral each vowed to do what they could to prevent the disease.
That night, Stewart--who has asked that her first name be changed--found a lump in her breast.
Kashmiri Breaks Ground in Golf-Course Turf Care
SRINAGAR, Indian-administered Kashmir (WOMENSENEWS)--Her father is a retired agrostologist, which means he studied grasses. And in her childhood she loved playing with boys.
Maybe that helps explain Nuzhat Gul's confidence as the first female turf manager of the Royal Springs Golf Course in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian-administered Kashmir.
Helen Thomas Coverage Skips the Underlying Issue
(WOMENSENEWS)--When Helen Thomas, the veteran White House columnist, offered her personal viewpoints on Israel on the sidelines of Jewish Heritage Day outside of the White House, her unguarded remarks were caught on video. The video clip quickly amassed a major audience on the Web, a medium that Thomas has long criticized and that proved her own undoing.
