The “Regional Cooperative Gender and Gawad Parangal (G2)
Convergence and Awards” is being held October 9-10, 2014 in Legazpi
City, Albay province, Philippines. Asian Women in Co-operative
Development Forum (AWCF) Executive Director Ms Sally Ganibe is among the
guest speakers. The event is sponsored by the Albay Provincial
Cooperative Development Council (PCDC), Regional Cooperative Leaders,
Cooperative Development Authority (CDA) Region 5 office, and the
Provincial Government of Albay.
The
event’s theme is “Inspiring Change for Women and Men in Cooperatives.”
On opening day, Ms Ganibe spoke on gender and development (GAD). CDA
Board Administrator Ms Mercedes Castillo, another guest speaker, talked
on GAD mainstreaming, the CDA Memorandum Circular on GAD in co-ops, and the “Declaration and Call for Action”
done during the country’s first-ever GAD summit held in Subic Bay in
March 2014. The Declaration, crafted by hundreds of participants from
co-ops nationwide, elaborated on why and how GAD efforts in co-ops can
be strengthened.
Meanwhile, the Legazpi City event has about 89 participants from co-ops in the country’s Region 5 (Bicol).
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Trainers training on gender in co-ops slated
A “Training of Trainers (TOT) on Gender for Co-operatives” will be
held November 4-7, 2014 in Ugac Sur, Tuguegarao City (Region2),
Philippines. Organized by the Asian Women in Co-operative Development Forum (AWCF), in cooperation with the
Philippines's Cooperative Development Authority-Tuguegarao Extension
Office (CDA-TEO).
The training is for members of co-ops' Gender Committee and Education Committee, Gender Focal Persons, and human resource staff and trainers who will handle gender education in co-ops.
For more information on the training, please contact--
a) AWCF: (e-mail) gadsummit@coopwomen.org OR gender.coop@yahoo.com (mobile) 09174579228; 09186354943; 09223856048
b) CDA-TEO: (mobile) 09061316633; 09217303340, care of Mr. Francisco M. Natividad, Senior Cooperative Development Specialist of CDA-TEO
Registration for the training is on or before October 31, 2014.
For more information about gender equality in Philippine co-ops, please see: http://cda.gov.ph/images/Issuances/MCs/MC2013-22-Guidelines-on-mainstreaming-GAD-in-coops.pdf
http://coopwomen.org/pdfs/full_declaration_final_gadsummit2014_ph1.pdf
The training is for members of co-ops' Gender Committee and Education Committee, Gender Focal Persons, and human resource staff and trainers who will handle gender education in co-ops.
For more information on the training, please contact--
a) AWCF: (e-mail) gadsummit@coopwomen.org OR gender.coop@yahoo.com (mobile) 09174579228; 09186354943; 09223856048
b) CDA-TEO: (mobile) 09061316633; 09217303340, care of Mr. Francisco M. Natividad, Senior Cooperative Development Specialist of CDA-TEO
Registration for the training is on or before October 31, 2014.
For more information about gender equality in Philippine co-ops, please see: http://cda.gov.ph/images/Issuances/MCs/MC2013-22-Guidelines-on-mainstreaming-GAD-in-coops.pdf
http://coopwomen.org/pdfs/full_declaration_final_gadsummit2014_ph1.pdf
Thursday, October 2, 2014
AWCF shares on GE with Metro Manila co-ops
Ms Salome Ganibe (in photo), AWCF Executive Director, was among the guest speakers of the “1st Metro Manila Cooperative Congress” held September 26, 2014 in Pasay City, Metro Manila, Philippines. The Congress theme was “Responding to Cooperative Blueprint…2020.” Ms Ganibe spoke on the mainstreaming of gender equality (GE) in co-ops.
The Regional Cooperative Development Council-National Capital Region (RCDC-NCR) and the Metro Manila Association of Cooperative Development Officers (MEMACDO) convened the Congress, in coordination with the Cooperative Development Authority-Manila Extension Office (CDA-MEO).
The Congress objectives
1. To elevate participation of women and GE within membership and governance to a new level (Co-ops are better because they give individuals participation through ownership, which makes them inherently more relevant in the contemporary world)
2. To assess the status of co-ops, their strengths and weaknesses; compliance status and development plans for each sector; presentation of profile of members; segregation of data, men, women, youth, leadership involvement of young leaders, women leaders
3. To increase awareness on Asean integration and the response of co-ops toward the International Co-operative Alliance ( ICA) Blueprint 2020
4. To present development plans and programs of co-op by sector.
The Congress gathered representatives from co-ops in Metro Manila, also known as the Philippines’s National Capital Region (NCR). Metro Manila has 16 cities and one municipality.
Highlights of Ms Ganibe’s presentation
Ms Ganibe pointed out to the delegates that with GE, women and men have the same value, equal rights, commitments, visibility, empowerment and participation in all spheres of public and private life. Pursuing GE in co-ops requires the acceptance and appreciation of the complementarity of women and men, and their diverse roles in society and in co-ops.
She emphasized that using gender as an analytical tool does not focus on women as an isolated group. Rather, there is recognition of the roles and needs of both women and men. Inputs from both women and men are required to achieve GE in co-ops.
She also stated that co-ops, in general, have mostly women members, but women’s large numbers in co-ops doesn’t automatically mean that they are empowered as individuals. Thus co-ops must ensure that their benefits reach everyone in the family/household. Gender-fair co-ops see to it that economic benefits are equitably shared between women and men, with their specific gender-related needs duly considered.
Ms Ganibe said co-ops should pursue GE for two reasons: The first reason is that promoting GE expresses the co-ops’ adherence to the universal values of equality, equity, solidarity, social responsibility, and caring for others as stated in the “Statement on the Co-operative Identity” of the ICA. The second reason is that the promotion of GE is a strategy or a means to achieve economic success (ICA Blueprint 2020).
Ms Ganibe also informed the Congress delegates of AWCF’s GE initiatives in the Philippines, as a resource body on gender and co-ops in Asia that operates also in Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam. She presented results of AWCF’s GE projects in the Philippines that have developed a number of gender-fair co-ops in different regions of the country. On updates on the continuing gender efforts in Philippine co-ops, Ms Ganibe said that, so far, advocacy (through a “Call for Action” from co-ops) to the CDA had been made for a policy pronouncement for the promotion of GE in co-ops; the CDA had issued a memorandum circular that contains guidelines for integrating gender in Philippines co-ops (November 2013); and the first-ever gender and development (GAD) summit for co-ops in the country had crafted the “Declaration and Call for Action of the Philippines’s National Summit on GAD in Co-ops” (March 2014).
Ms Ganibe also explained that amid all the exciting developments for GE in Philippine co-ops, AWCF continues its advocacy in GE in co-ops by implementing gender-related activities. AWCF continues to conduct gender-sensitivity training and gender-related training and activities for men, youth, and the elderly. In the Philippines, the trainers’ training on GE in co-ops conducted by AWCF has produced, as of this writing, around 150 women and men trainers who can help address co-ops’ capacity-building needs on gender.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)