4:42 pm By la Macha · Immigration · 1 Comment
22 May 2009I really enjoyed listening to this broadcast of The Story from American Public Media. It tells the story of two people dealing with immigration: the first, a former soldier and child of immigrants who decided to become a movie maker, the second, a former translator and single mother that escaped from a war torn country. From the website comes this blurb:
Like many of today’s veterans, Brian Iglesias came home from the war expecting to put his skills as a Marine to good use in the civilian workforce. That didn’t happen. Despite his high academic achievements and military honors, Brian struggled to find an entry-level job.
Raya Asee is an Iraqi refugee living in Sweden. Dick spoke with her last fall and all Raya could talk about was her 10-year-old son, Bashar. She’d had to leave him with extended family in Jordan when she’d gone to Europe to seek refugee status. The two had not seen one another for a year and a half.
You can listen to the stories here. I think listening to the stories one right after another really highlights the way immigration plays out for women in a way all the polls in the world can’t. There are children to think of, and endless work, and violence, and fear, and longing for home, and sadness–and joy and love too. How bad is bad enough? When is it time to leave? What happens when there isn’t any better or maybe even worse that “here?”
Unfortunately, as Mala noted, stories and voices from people who are actually experiencing are not easily quantifiable, and thus, never seem to really count to the people who could make a difference. Maybe this is where immigration rights advocates need to be doing their work? Challenging the idea that statistics can really tell a story of a community that is so diverse–so completely undefinable.
11:27 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Media| Women · Comments Off
28 Oct 2008
With a mujer president leading the country, an organization of over 100 journalists in Argentina want to change the way crimes against women are covered in the media. They have drawn up 10 “commandments” for news coverage of gender-based crimes, which include avoiding expressions like “crime of passion” and incorporating terms like “femicide.”
The Argentine Network of Journalists for Non-Sexist Communication (PAR) will officially release the guidelines on Nov. 25, International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The list is a really good one that all of us should strive to use, not just those who work in media.
For the 10 Commandments of reporting gender-based violence, see after the jump.
11:42 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Culture| Family| Lifestyle| mexico · Comments Off
13 Mar 2007
As normal as it might seem to some of us here in the U.S., the concept of a man doing housework or taking care of kids is still unheard of in some parts of Latin America. Mexico City wants to change that, and mayor Marcelo Ebrard is inciting his government to kick off a “re-education” plan for men in his city:
…to make them participants in domestic work, such as caring for and raising their children.“It’s about changing our mentality. We have to share work and responsibilities,” he said upon inaugurating the Equality in Gender Fair yesterday, part of the International Women’s Day festivities.
He said that above all this is important because society is not the same as 40 years ago, and now women in Mexico represent a third of the “economically active” population, and that number will grow in the next few years.
The mayor has ordered that the program — which will feature workshops, talks and courses for men, organized by the city’s Women’s Institute — begin in less than two weeks.
Via / La Jornada
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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