In the spring of 2024 IGLI hosted a 2.5 day Feminist Peace Summit. We convened the Summit in the face of intensifying militarization and climate devastation at home and abroad, and believe it is more urgent than ever to gather our social movements to call for genuine human security grounded in peace, justice, and ecological sustainability. The Summit included plenaries with renowned scholars, policymakers, and activists; breakout group discussions; and programming for 250 participants from across the globe.
The Feminist Peace Summit was organized by the Feminist Peace Initiative, a collaboration between Grassroots Global Justice Alliance, MADRE, and Women Cross DMZ, in partnership with The Inclusive Global Leadership Initiative at the Sié Center at the University of Denver.
Our Goals
Advancing a Feminist Peace agenda in U.S. foreign policy and the anti-war movement.
Building power + recognition for the role of diasporic communities in breaking down the binary between domestic and foreign policy.
Ending the war and militarization at home and challenging the militarism on display during the 2024 election cycle.
Programming
Across three days we hosted 5 plenary panels with 19 speakers from academic, activist, and policy-making backgrounds. All the panels were recorded and can be accessed below. The summit incorporated arts, activism and collaborative sessions. Attendees could also join 16 breakout sessions to convene on subjects of interest and discuss pathways forward on numerous pressing issues.
Plenary Panels
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Moderator - Marie Berry: Director of the Inclusive Global Leadership Initiative (IGLI) and the Sié Cheou Kang Center for International Security and Diplomacy, University of Denver Korbel School of International Studies
Panelists
Toni Haastrup: Chair of Global Politics, University of Manchester
Cynthia Enloe: Professor, Department of Sustainability and Social Justice, Clark University
Margo Okazawa Rey: Professor Emerita San Francisco State University
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Moderator - Kavita Ramdas: KNR Sisters, Visiting Professor at Princeton University, Former Director of Open Society Foundation Women's Rights Program
Panelists
Palestine - Lara Kiswani: Executive Director, Arab Resource and Organizing Center (AROC)
Iran - Sara Hagdoosti: Executive Director, Win Without War
North Korea - Christine Ahn: Founder and Executive Director of Women Cross DMZ
China – Sandy Shan: Executive Director, Justice is Global
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Moderator - Kitzia Esteva: Gender Justice National Organizer, Grassroots Global Justice Alliance
Panelists
Janene Yazzie: Director of Policy and Advocacy, NDN Collective
Nana Gyamfi: Executive Director, Black Alliance for Just Immigration, Co-Founder, Justice Warriors 4 Black Lives
Diana Lopez: Executive Director, South Western Workers Union
Xochtil Larios - Youth Justice Coordinator at Communities United for Restorative Youth Justice (CURYJ)
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Moderator - Diana Duarte: Director of Policy and Strategic Engagement at MADRE
Panelists
Yanar Mohammed: Co-Founder and President, Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq
Linda Burnham: Project 2050, Women’s Rights and Racial Justice Writer and Activist, Co-Editor of Power Concedes Nothing: How Grassroots Organizing Wins Elections
Halema Wali: Co-Founder and Director of Community Engagement, Afghans for a Better Tomorrow
Yoon Ra: Cultural Organizer, Red Canary Song
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Organizers summarizing collective feedback, input and calls to action.
Breakout Sessions
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In recent times, the idea of a feminist foreign policy has gained some momentum across the Global North, in particular, but not without some interest from a few Global South countries like Mexico. This session will look more closely at whether "foreign policy" even with a "feminist" prefix is able to advance a future where peace and justice prevail for all people and for our earth, given current global power dynamics and capitalist dominated economic systems. What would it take to reclaim the word ''peace" as feminists so that our movements can legitimately challenge the dominant framework of militarism? Is the current focus on a "feminist foreign policy" no more than neo-imperialism dressed in pink? What concerns emerge when we analyze such policies as they have played out in Sweden, France, and Canada? What have we learned from the disproportionate focus on "women's empowerment" and "reproductive access and choice" or simply funding more women's organizations? How might we imagine an approach that fundamentally shifts power away from dominant Global North economies and recognizes the presence of women in their range of roles from agricultural workers and farmers, to traders and business people, to mobilizers of social movements, and significant political and community leaders in their societies. Our breakout session will provide a space for sharing ideas, successful strategies that have been used, and thoughts about what we might be able to move forward within our own organizations, movements, and networks. We will explore potential areas for future collaboration, strategies to deepen resistance to current frameworks, and identify possible next steps for joint action.
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Movement leaders across time and space map the arc of social change in lifetimes, advising that any strategy we engage in today has been shaped by the 100 years before us, and must be accountable to those who will be here 100 years from now. How can we best steward this long arc of social change? How do we build bridges across generations, navigate conflict, and build sustainable movement infrastructure that allows individuals from all generations to lead? In this breakout, we will hear from preeminent movement leaders on what intergenerational building means to them, why it is imperative for our current political moment, and how we can build sustainable movements against militarism and war that empower individuals from all generations
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The global movement for the liberation of Palestine has grown significantly in the last six months. The escalation of the israeli state's genocidal assault on Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank has ignited millions around the world to demand: an immediate and permanent ceasefire, an end to the occupation, the release of all Palestinian prisoners and detainees, the right of return for all Palestinian refugees and their descendants, and ultimately a free Palestine from the river to the sea. As the situation on the ground constantly changes, organizers also pivot to stay aligned with Palestinian leadership. This session will discuss the existing and emerging needs we are seeing in movement spaces as well as the strategies being used to address them.
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The militarism of the border and attacks on migrant communities is a crucial issue of U.S. policy. From the draconian anti-immigrant legislation taking place in Florida and having a domino effect in the southern states to the anti-black targeted deportation of Haitian communities and the border militarism crisis, we will discuss community-organizing approaches to resisting and advancing migrant justice.
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Join a guided or independent collage project organized around different prompts. This breakout session provides participants a chance to make art that can help us envision peace and justice. We also offer this breakout session for folks who need more introversion time or a break from engaging to use it as a space for reflection and pause.
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Join organizers with Red Canary Song, a grassroots coalition of migrant massage and sex workers organizing to combat the policing of migrant bodywork in New York City. This breakout session will discuss the imperative to bridge frameworks of labor rights, immigrant rights, sex worker rights, queer liberation, anti-gentrification and feminist abolition in organization to combat the policing of migrant sex workers. It will discuss the different outreach strategies RCS pursues, as well as the model of building base building with outreach through the capacity building of 2 massage worker outreach leads who will be present at the workshop. The workshop will be facilitated by Diya Bose, Assistant Professor of Sociology at William and Mary, who has over a decade of community engaged work with sex workers in South Asia. RCS participants include, Yoon Grace Ra, co-director of Fly in Power (RCS Documentary), Fran Yu (outreach team member and interpreter), Lisa (massage worker outreach organizer), and Mei Mei (massage worker outreach organizer).
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This session will discuss the power of narratives in shaping public perceptions and driving change to create feminist peace, and offer an opportunity to exchange strategies that can counter dominant militarized narratives and propel feminist peace visions. Together, we will explore what it would take to achieve the aim of feminist peacebuilding’s fundamental paradigm shift towards a multipolar world rooted in rematriation, collective care, and universal thriving. The discussion will examine narrative strategy that uplifts marginalized perspectives, documents and shapes political memory, and embraces community-driven narratives. Join us to gain and share invaluable insights into harnessing narrative power for meaningful change.
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When Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin requested $842 billion for the 2024 military budget, he said the 13.4 percent increase was driven by the need to respond to China, as well as other national security threats including Russia, Iran and North Korea. As the United States pursues an aggressive strategy of investing in more militarization in preparation for war, women peace activists are calling for a peace-first approach to prevent a cold and hot war and yield better outcomes for the people in China, North and South Korea, Ukraine and Russia, and Iran. In this session, we will discuss why the U.S.’ militaristic approach is counter-productive and share important work being done by women peacemakers.
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Since the Taliban’s seizure of power in 2021, women and girls in Afghanistan have been subjected to severe repression of their rights and freedoms, which legal scholars and activists agree amounts to a system of apartheid to deliberately subjugate them based on gender. Existing international legal frameworks are ill-equipped to address gender-based human rights violations of this nature and scale. The failure to articulate violations of this kind in international legal frameworks has constrained action in instances where a gender-inclusive approach is required. Currently there is an expanding discourse to recognize “gender apartheid” as an opportunity to bring international law into alignment with wider understandings of “race’ and “gender”. This Breakout session will provide a vibrant discussion on: Why does the condition of women in Afghanistan matter to the world? What role can the global community play to hold perpetrators of mass human rights violations accountable? How can the actors in the women, peace and security field mobilize, locally and globally, to bring about the change we want to see.
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What are the biggest opportunities and threats when it comes to funding feminist peace work right now? How can we map and understand the landscape of feminist peace work, and collectively ensure that it is resourced and strengthened? What connections and alliances can we make to navigate these realities, resource impactful work, and transform philanthropy to pursue feminist, demilitarized, and decolonized approaches to peace? This session will focus on interactive, small-group discussions geared towards generating lessons and strategic proposals that participants, operating inside and/or outside of philanthropy, can integrate into their work.
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Today, our work to bridge movement ideals to policy has to shift to a complex reality of extraordinary corruption, insurrectionists, rising authoritarianism domestically and abroad, and a lack of political courage from the entrenched left. At the same time, we have true champions who can be partners in moving forward visionary change. In this session, we will discuss how we can update our theory of change to use Congressional advocacy in rapid-response and visionary campaigns to build a feminist peace and fight back against authoritarian attacks.
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At this historic moment, anti-war feminists from the diaspora have an unprecedented opportunity to transform U.S. foreign policy and shift the United States away from a war economy and towards one built on a green and care economy. Not only do diaspora leaders, their scholarship, and their organizations provide historical context and crucial understanding of the impact of U.S. foreign policy on their homelands, they offer insight on the domestic implications of hawkish rhetoric and policies. By centering the voices of those most impacted by war, diaspora feminist peace activists are reinvigorating the country’s anti-war movement by making connections between the violence of U.S. foreign policy and the militarization of security and criminalization of dissent here at home. In this breakout session, we will share efforts by diaspora peace movements on key conflicts and identify strategies to join together to take on U.S. militarism at home and abroad, and transform our world towards feminist peace.
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From prevention-based education to post-conflict reconciliation, there are a variety of ways in which the arts can be used to shift the dominant narrative away from militarism and towards peace. By using a selection of guiding questions, international case studies, and their own experiences, participants will critically analyse the ways in which the arts can be integrated into sustainable, holistic, and participatory feminist peacebuilding practices. Specific focus will be placed on the importance of measuring impact, the limitations to such an approach, and on opportunities for growth.
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This session will focus on the inextricable links of feminism, Black and Indigenous liberation, and nuclear weapons abolition, and how emergent strategy can provide actionable ways to practice the liberated futures we’re working for. Attendees will learn about the disproportionate harms of nuclear weapons to women and genderqueer people, children, and Black and Indigenous communities; the historical efforts of feminist anti-nuclear organizing in particular led by Black women; and the importance and influence these communities can and do have to build a more just, equitable, caring, resilient, sustainable world free from nuclear weapons. Together, attendees will discuss how the threats of nuclear weapons intersect with the feminist struggles of their work and ways to implement emergent strategies into their organizing.
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Across the world, military pollution and escalating wars are exacerbating impacts of climate crisis and violence in our communities. Climate justice requires demilitarization and centering feminist solutions.
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Authoritarian regimes across the world are learning from each other, leading to the rise of a Global Right that shares tactics and beliefs rooted in hierarchy, exclusion, and domination. Activists are finding creative and strategic ways to counter these worrisome trends and protect marginalized communities who are on the receiving end of much of this violence and oppression. This breakout group connects activists across contexts and struggles to strategize how we can learn from each other to challenge authoritarian repression and consider ways to organize together against the rollback of rights and freedoms. It identifies similar patterns between white nationalists in the US and Hindutva in India, among other violent exclusionary systems and ideologies.
Art Activism
Musical Performance by Farah Siraj
“Fly in Power” Movie Screening with Red Canary Song
Collaging for Peace and Justice
Our partners