More
than 1,000 women from Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi participated
in the SRBWI planning phase. They stated repeatedly and unequivocally
that they care deeply about the quality of life in their communities
(health care, schools, services for children, youth and the elderly),
lack of economic opportunity, land retention and cultural preservation.
The SRBWI regional advisory committee has taken the information
gathered during its planning phase and framed it within a Human
Rights Agenda (taken from the United Nations Declaration of Human
Rights). This Human Rights Agenda recognizes the issues identified
as symptoms of the violation of basic human rights to which southern
rural black women and all human beings born free and equal are entitled.
They include:
-
The right to human
rights no matter what race, sex, color, religion, nationality,
sexual orientation and class you are, or opinions you have;
-
The right to have
basic needs met, and whatever it takes to live with pride and
become the person you wish to be;
-
The right to a
decent life including: food, clothes, a home, and medical care;
-
The right to equal
access to economic resources including credit, technology, information
and training;
-
The right to work,
to free choice of employment, to just and
favorable conditions of work, to be treated with dignity and
respect;
-
The right to free
education when you are young with real
opportunities for greater learning as you grow older;
-
The right to safe,
decent and affordable housing;
-
The right to freedom
of expression, including access to media;
-
The right to culture
and to benefit from scientific discoveries;
-
The right to be
treated equally by the law and protected under
the law;
-
The right to participate
in government either by holding office or voting for others;
-
The right to get
help from society if sick, unable to work, old, or a widow;
-
The right to build
individual and community wealth, and to own property alone as
well as in association with others, and the right to inherit;
-
The right to choose
to marry, choose who you want to marry, if you want to stay married
and if you want to have a family;
-
The right to rest
and have fun and reasonable work hours
The
gap between the human rights identified and their enjoyment by southern
rural black women is in part due to a lack of appropriate governmental
and private recourse mechanisms at the state and local level. SRBWI
has engaged in a five year plan of action to promote women’s
economic and social independence by eradicating the persistent burden
of poverty on women. Structural causes of poverty will be addressed
through changes in economic, social, and political structures and
by ensuring access to education, training, technical assistance,
resources and public services as vital ingredients to increased
opportunity.
In
the 77 targeted counties of the Black Belt of Alabama and Georgia
and the Delta in Mississippi, SRBWI facilitates rural women’s
access to resources, opportunities and public services, and advances
community-centered economic and asset development strategy rooted
in macro-economic trends.
Choose
any indicator – poverty, poor education, unemployment, births
to teen mothers, lack of health care, lack of transportation, infant
deaths – and these targeted counties will trail the rest of
the country. They are littered with evidence of social fragmentation:
high rates of disability, single mother heads of household, low
wages, poor living conditions, low expectations, and children at
risk. To be successful, the SRBWI recognizes that the proposed action
agenda will require adequate mobilization of resources at the local,
state and regional level. And the establishment and/or strengthening
of mechanisms at all levels for accountability to targeted constituents.
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