Saturday, December 1, 2007

En route to Bali

MADRE's work with women and families around the world beats at the heart of the movement to reset the course of the world. In communities where we work - in Sudan, Iraq, Nicaragua, Cuba, Haiti, Guatemala, Kenya, Peru, Colombia, and Panama - women experience the global crisis of climate change on a daily basis. They face wars, environmental destruction, poverty, and gender-based violence. Yet, they reject catastrophic end-of-the-world scenarios because they know that change is not only possible - it is already happening.

It is the women themselves who are creating this change.

Tomorrow, we will travel to Bali, Indonesia for the UN Conference on Climate Change and lend our voices to the continuing international debate on what we need to do about climate change. We know that time is running out to reverse the trend of rising temperatures, increasing greenhouse gas emissions, deteriorating biodiversity, and other dangers. We also know that sustainable solutions are within reach and that women in communities around the world have already begun to implement them.

This blog will serve as an on-going record of developments at the conference and of MADRE’s analysis on the issues of agrofuels, biodiversity, deforestation, natural disasters, and more. You will hear our perspectives on what government representatives are saying and not saying, and you will learn why climate change is a women's human rights issue that affects us all.

Stay tuned for our next entry in a couple of days after we land in Bali!

- Yifat Susskind, MADRE Communications Director
- Diana Duarte, MADRE Media Coordinator




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