By Aleta | Comms
Dear friends,
We are still coming off the buzz of a really energetic and earnest Girls’ National Conference in Myanmar. Bringing together adolescent girls from across 70 diverse communities, the conference supported girls to work together and articulate an agenda to submit to regional and national lawmakers. This agenda will be in the form of a statement. It will describe the barriers faced by girls in communities across Myanmar and the ways that law-makers can help knock down these barriers so that all girls can achieve their full potential.
As mentioned in the previous report, we created opportunities for girls from all of our project communities to contribute directly to the development of an agenda for national and regional change – an agenda that would support girls’ development, education, access to safe work, freedom of movement, expression and beyond. The first step was holding Regional Forums in 15 geographic hubs. Then, based on the outcomes from those events, we built out the content and activities needed to make the National Conference both productive and deeply connected to the views and attitudes of adolescent girls.
The forums were focused on consensus-building activities. The forum discussions were based on what we already knew about the situations of girls in different areas and the concerns girls have expressed to us in the past. In small groups, girls worked through various possible barriers to identify which applied most directly to their lives. They also discussed specific examples of times when, as a girl, they have encountered a barrier, been discriminated against, or felt unheard.
Immediately following the regional forums, we held our inaugural Girls’ National Conference in the City Hall of the ancient capital of Mandalay. The theme was “Girls, do you know you can fly?” Attending the conference were 140 adolescent girls – peer-selected delegates representing nearly all of Girl Determined’s project communities. Each spokesgirl shared on behalf of girls in her unique community, speaking out in a broader discussion with other girls facing sometimes similar and sometimes different issues.
Over two full days, the conference brought girls’ voices and experiences to the fore, while encouraging girls to act as change-makers in their communities and to consider a different future for girls and women. Girls heard from one another and were introduced to basic concepts of civic action. Through consensus-building activities, they drafted a joint-statement expressing the concise needs of adolescent girls nation-wide.
We expect to see more girls taking issues into their own hands by expressing their needs in a structured way and demanding accountability by those in positions to make decisions.
Now that the conference has ended, two tasks remain:
We are excited to see how this plays out in the coming months, as girls’ voices resonate through Myanmar to create awareness of the hardships girls face, and of how they can rise up together. Thank you for reading and for helping advance the girl agenda!
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