A Woman’s Place is Back in Town

Details
Date:

May 20

Time:

07:00 pm - 09:00 pm

Click to Register: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/a-womans-place-is-back-in-town-tickets-59993907392
Organizer

Woman's Place UK

Website: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/o/womans-place-uk-15661534662
Venue

TBC

London

A Woman’s Place is Back in Town


Public Meeting in London


Monday 20 May 2019 (Venue to be announced)


Doors open at 6:30pm, for 7.00pm start.


We are delighted that Meghan Murphy has accepted our invitation to speak in London.


She will join other brilliant and distinguished women, Julie Bindel, Professor Selina Todd and Nina M.


About Woman’s Place UK


Woman’s Place UK was founded in September 2017 to ensure women’s voices would be heard in the consultation on proposals to change the Gender Recognition Act. We had 5 demands and we didn’t expect the campaign to last more than 3-4 months.

Thanks to the support and actions of thousands of people all over the UK we had a big collective impact on the debate and, while we don’t expect to hear the results of the consultation yet, we know that the government has heard the voices of thousands of women.

At the same time, the debate has exposed the poor state of women’s rights in the UK. We have decided therefore to develop a broader campaign on the foundations we have built.

We will keep up the pressure on the government around the GRA and on councils and organisations to uphold equality law.

But there are other battles we need to fight too.


So we have made some New Year Resolutions to help us broaden the campaign in 2019:

1. Women have a right to self-organise
Women have a right to self-organisation, to speak and to be heard free from fear of abuse, threat or vilification in public and political discourse and in academia. This should be actively facilitated by those with civic or legal responsibility for promoting equality.

2. The law must work for women
The law must be strengthened to ensure that all women who want or need single sex spaces (including toilets, health provision accommodation, prisons, sports, sexual and domestic violence services) are able to access them without resorting to extraordinary measures. Service providers should be supported in offering such services through legal and financial means and clear guidance must be issued on the exercising of such rights.

3. An end to violence against women
Government must make the end to male violence against women and girls a priority. Sustainable funding for independent women-led services for women subjected to VAWG must be fully resourced by central government alongside the implementation of statutory relationships and sex education in all schools.

4. Nothing about us without us.
All organisations, committees and politicians speaking on issues of material concern to women to demonstrate that they have widely consulted the women they represent and serve and that such consultation informs their action and their policies.

5. Sex matters
Rigorous collection and analysis of sex-based data and high-quality research must be central to the development of any services, policies or actions which address women’s needs or which challenge sex discrimination and inequality.


Speaker biographies:


Meghan Murphy is a freelance writer and journalist. She has been podcasting and writing about feminism since 2010, is the founder and editor Feminist Current, Canada’s leading feminist website and has published work in numerous national and internationl publications.


Julie Bindel is a journalist, writer, broadcaster and researcher active in the global campaign to end violence towards women and children since 1979.


Selina Todd is Professor of Modern History at Oxford University. Her research focuses on women, feminism and working-class life in modern Britain.


Nina M is a survivor of domestic abuse and now raises awareness of the Freedom Programme as a vital recovery & information tool for all women, campaigns against abusive institutions and legal inequality faced by Muslim women in marriage.




Meeting hosted by Woman’s Place UK https://womansplaceuk.org/


FAQs


Are there ID or minimum age requirements to enter the event?


ID is required for each person attending and must match the name on the ticket. For this reason, only one ticket can be booked at a time – sorry for the inconvenience.


There is no minimum age. Babes in arms are encouraged. Please consider the suitability of the event if bringing children. No unaccompanied children.


What can I bring into the event?


For the security of all attendees, please don’t bring excessive belongings to the event. Bags may be searched.


How can I contact the organiser with any questions?


Please use the Contact button at the bottom of this page, or email: awomansplaceuk@gmail.com   


What’s the refund policy?


Tickets bought may be refunded up to seven days before the event. Organisers reserve the right to cancel and refund any tickets ordered. Venue details are confidential to ticket-holders. A collection will also be made to cover costs of the meeting.

Accessibility?


Venue is wheelchair accessible. Please contact us to discuss your accessibility requirements (use the Contact button at the bottom of the page).

We believe that it is important to share a range of viewpoints on women’s rights and advancement from different perspectives. WPUK does not necessarily agree or endorse all the views that we share.