词条 | Ellen Woodsworth |
释义 |
Woodsworth sat on the Vancouver city council for six years, co-founding initiatives such as the World Peace Summit and Women Transforming Cities Society. She has championed issues such as affordable housing and homelessness, electoral reform, environmental sustainability, women's rights, seniors' rights, LGTTBQ rights, racism, free trade, and economic equality.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Early life and educationBorn in Toronto, Ontario, to Jean and Ken Woodsworth, Woodsworth went to the Canadian Academy for high school in Japan, where her father was born and raised, before returning to Canada to complete her BA at the University of British Columbia. Woodsworth is the great-niece of J. S. Woodsworth, founder and first leader of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, and cousin of former New Democratic Party MP Grace MacInnis. Early activismAfter earning her degree she co-founded and edited a women's newspaper titled The Other Woman in Toronto and created CORA the Women's Liberation Bookmobile with Judith Quinlan. In 1974, Woodsworth helped found the Toronto Wages for Housework Campaign. She moved to London, England to work with the International Wages for Housework Campaign in 1975. Activism achievements in VancouverIn 1979, Woodsworth was part of a national group that forced Canada to include unpaid work in the 1996 census.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Woodsworth also chaired the BC Action Canada Network, which opposed the free trade agreements.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} She was hired as a social planner by the District of North Vancouver to document the child care needs of the district. Woodsworth was elected chair of Britannia Community Services Centre. She was on the Board of REACH Community Health Clinic coming up with the logo "community health in community hands" to support neighbourhood health services. She served as chair of the Bridge Housing Society. Woodsworth also sat on the inaugural board of the LGBTTQ Generations Project. Woodsworth has been active in protests against the Kinder Morgan Pipeline and Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline. Vancouver City CouncillorIn 2002, Woodsworth was elected a Vancouver City Councillor. She was immediately appointed the Vancouver representative to the Executive of the Union of BC Municipalities, and the Executive of the Lower Mainland Treaty Advisory Council. She was the first openly lesbian city councillor in Canada. Woodsworth sat on the Vancouver City Council for six years. During this time the Vancouver City Council joined the Canadian Coalition of Municipalities Against Racism and Discrimination and set up women's, multicultural and LGTTBQ Council Advisory Committees. Woodsworth was part of the Vancouver Council that created the Greenest City by 2020 environmental strategy. Call for campaign finance changesAfter Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson received campaign donations from at least two American supporters, Woodsworth called for a ban on foreign campaign donations such as those received by Robertson.[2] World Peace SummitWoodsworth co-founded the World Peace Summit, a week-long conference bringing more than 35,000 participants to Vancouver from around the world.{{Citation needed|date=October 2016}} Women Transforming Cities International SocietyBefore leaving the Vancouver City Council, Woodsworth and the chair of the city's Women's Advisory Committee founded Women Transforming Cities (WTC). This organization conducts multi-lingual dialogues in the World Cafe format, to bring out women's suggestions for how their city could become safer and more suited to their needs. Women Transforming Cities organized a sold-out National Conference with Councillors, academics, urbanists, women's organizations, and unions; a sold-out Pecha Kucha at the 1,200 seat Vogue Theatre and a very successful "Hot Pink Paper" 2014 municipal election campaign to get all Vancouver parties to support 11 key issues to make cities work for women and girls. Ellen was invited by the UN to speak at their "Women Friendly Cities International Conference" in Turkey. WTC is part of a five-city coalition that produced "Advancing Equity and Inclusion a Guide for Municipalities' which was launched at the Federation of Canadian Municipalities AGM in Edmonton in 2015. WTC was part of the national alliance Up for Debate 2015 calling for Federal leaders debate on women's issues and is part of the UN-Habitat 3 Urban Thinkers Campuses. in 2016 Ellen was invited to speak in Prague at the EU/North American UN-Habitat 3 Regional meeting, in New York to participate in the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights, UN-Habitat 3 meeting of human rights experts speaking on housing and cities, at the Montevideo 6th Annual Smart Sustainable Cities Conference about how to put an intersectional lens with disaggregated data on climate change policies and she spoke at the UN-Habitat 3 conference in Quito in 2016 to launch the global Women Friendly Cities Challenge and to speak about inclusion of LGTBQI2S issues in the implementation of the New Urban Agenda. See Queer Declaration on Change.org. She was part of the WTC panel at the Canadian Planners Institute AGM, a keynote speaker at the SFU conference on women and the environment, and with the co-chair she has spoken to the heads of all the Engineering Departments at the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver Planning Commission. She was chosen as one of the 30 female top politicians in the City of Vancouver's History. At the World Urban Forum 9 in Kuala Lumpur she chaired the Women Transforming Cities panel which launched www.womenfriendlycitieschallenge.org an online platform of international wise practices. She was awarded the 2018 Rosemary Brown Award for "her work exemplary work to bring equality and justice for girls and women locally and globally". She chaired the Sept. 11 launch of the Women Friendly Cities 2018 Hot Pink Paper Municipal Campaign in Vancouver. Was invited to join 28 people to the Global Table on Female Leadership in Resilient Societies in India. [3]References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://womentransformingcities.org/|title=Women Transforming Cities|accessdate=November 5, 2016}} 2. ^[https://www.straight.com/article-258879/ubcm-resolution-could-turn-us-cash-taps "Union of B.C. Municipalities resolution could turn off U.S. cash taps for Vancouver elections"], Georgia Straight, September 24, 2009. 3. ^https://www.straight.com/article-834951/vancouver/equity-lens-applied-cities External links
7 : Year of birth missing (living people)|Living people|Coalition of Progressive Electors councillors|Women municipal councillors in Canada|Lesbian politicians|LGBT municipal councillors in Canada|Women in British Columbia politics |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。