FQT 19 February 2022

WDI Podcast - A podcast by Women's Declaration International

Feminist Question Time with speakers from UK, Chile and Australia Women's Declaration International (WDI) Feminist Question Time is our weekly online webinars. It is attended by a global feminist and activist audience of between 200-300. The main focus is how gender ideology is harming the rights of women and girls. You can see recordings of previous panels on our YouTube Channel. This week’s speakers: Maureen O Hara - UK Criminal justice, gender identity and compelled speech in England and Wales Bio: Feminist, Lawyer, Co-author of the declaration of women’s sex-based rights Carolina Agurto Flores and Constanza Riquelme Bórquez - Chila An ecofeminist look at the rights based on the sex of peasant girls and women in Chile Bio: Hello, my name is Carolina Agurto, I am 33 years old and have a 15-year-old son. I live in a rural area of the central valley in Chile, which bases its economy on peasant agriculture and, in the last 30 years, on patriarchal agro-extractivism. capitalist. I am an ecofeminist activist for women's rights based on sex, particularly peasant women; the right to nutrition and food, and the right to food sovereignty. I work independently as nutritionist, and I have a master's degree in human nutrition. Hello, my name is Constanza, I am 30 years old, an agronomist by profession, a teacher and facilitator in agroecology for peasant farmers, so I travel from the north and central zone of Chile. I write in Ecoféminas Críticas, I am active in food sovereignty movements since I want to exercise my right to work and care for the land. Helen Pringle - Austrlalia The Women's Pool - My talk concerns the Women's Pool, aka McIvers Ladies Pool, in Coogee, a suburb of Sydney where I live. The space fo the pool is for women and children only, and it recently celebrated its 100th anniversary. In 1995, the pool survived a challenge on the basis that its women-only policy was discriminatory, and in the last two years has been the subject of a campaign to allow transgender persons to access and inhabit the space. I talk about WHY it is important to maintain the pool as women-only, in terms of security and privacy, and women's freedom from male surveillance, but also in terms of women's conviviality. I will also say a little about how the book in which my chapter was almost wiped out by trans objections. Bio: I live and work in Sydney Australia, and am an associate professor at the University of NSW. I teach on women's rights and justice, political theory, Australian politics and international law. I co-founded the Nordic Model Information Network, a global research network supporting the abolition of the prostitution system. I owe what I am to the women of my family, including my great-grandmother, Agnes MacGregor Love, a fearless Glasgow suffragette. For more information: www.womensdeclaration.com