
Feminist talk

Feminist talk
23 September 2005 - Gender advocates advised to integrate MDGs
By Brenda Zulu
The joint discussion of the Association for Progressive Communications Women's Networking Support Programme (APC WNSP), African Women’s Development and Communication Network (FEMNET) and the WSIS Gender Caucus showed that it is important for gender and ICT advocates to embrace MDGs in order to talk in the same language with the government.

Feminist talk
23 September 2005 – Last Day at Geneva, End of Week 1 (concept of time no longer exists)
By Jac sm Kee
Of course! Just when I start to get the hang of things and feel like I am finally getting a vague idea of what is going on, it’s time to go. Brenda Zulu who arrived late last night will be taking over blogging for the next week while I go home to the land of good food at reasonable prices (yipee!). It should be exciting. A real test of the promise of participatory, multi-stakeholder, transparent...

Feminist talk
22 September – Quickie on IG (a little late)
By Jac sm Kee
Sorry for late blog today. The WSIS Gender Caucus have come up with a draft Briefing Paper that states its positions on WSIS PrepCom-3 so far, and by the time Lenka & I worked on inputs and comments to the draft to be submitted to the caucus, I couldn’t face Fabala anymore...

Feminist talk
21 September 2005 – Sex[ism] in the Afternoon (1:00pm – 3:00pm)
By Jac sm Kee
HUMPH! I am so pissed off I could punch someone (if I didn’t believe in random acts of violence, I would have by now!! Grr..) To start from the beginning, a civil society side event was organised on “Internet Governance Forum Function” with plenary presentations by members of WGIG. This was to have a space for discussion on how a global forum or interface on internet governance might look like,...

Feminist talk
21 September 2005 – Porn[ography] in the Morning (10:00am – 1:00pm)
By Jac sm Kee
The day started with sun! After two days of feeling like a houseplant, the feeling of optimism that the bright, yellow and warm gaze of actual sun is not to be sneered at...

Feminist talk
20 September 2005 - Getting to the Gender Ghetto (post-lunch-that-didn’t-happen)
By Jac sm Kee
In the last hour where I sat through the plenary session, my ears were on high alert for the mention of gender. Granted I only managed to catch a few governments’ statements (i.e. Switzerland, Venezuela, Turkey, Burkina Faso, Singapore, South Africa and Republic of Korea) before stakeholders like the ITU, CCBI and the Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus were given the floor for their...

Feminist talk
20 September 2005 – All Over the Place (pretty much the whole day)
By Jac sm Kee
After blogging till pretty late last night, woke up a wee bit late this morning =/ Managed to catch the tail-end of the Sub-Committee A plenary session, which discussed about internet governance issues. ..

Feminist talk
19 September 2005 - Civil Society Content and Themes Meeting (6:00pm – 7:00)
By Jac sm Kee
The evening reception happening outside of the meeting room really tested the commitment of the participants in this meeting (me! me!). But Tracey Naughton (MISA - Media Institute of Southern Africa) who chaired the meeting was amazingly efficient, and despite it starting almost 20 minutes late, she managed to outline the new method and structure of working, faciliate a discussion on its finer...

Feminist talk
19 September 2005 - Gender Caucus Meeting (1:00pm – 2:00pm)
By Jac sm Kee
Admittedly I was late for this because I got hopelessly lost at the Palais de Nations Building. When I finally arrived, still hungry and panting, the meeting was in full-swing. Kind of...

Feminist talk
19 Sept 2005 – Opening Plenary (10:00am – 12:00pm)
By Jac sm Kee
So, all in all, a much more politically charged day than I thought
it would be. For the first time possibly ever, I was actually impatient
to be on time for the Opening Plenary of an event...
(warning: a rather long post that tries to make sense of the Human Rights in China accreditation issue and the politicisation of international advocacy platforms that it exposes)
it would be. For the first time possibly ever, I was actually impatient
to be on time for the Opening Plenary of an event...
(warning: a rather long post that tries to make sense of the Human Rights in China accreditation issue and the politicisation of international advocacy platforms that it exposes)