Can’t skip work? Women can still flex might on ‘Day Without Women’
Gender equality will never become a reality until governments invest in breaking down the social constraints that prevent women living in poverty from progressing economically, Christian Aid has said ahead of International Women’s Day 2017 (March 8).
Women are being asked to avoid shopping in stores and online – except for local small businesses and women-owned companies that support A Day Without a Woman.
Women’s March Alabama organizers said the group is showing its support for the event in other ways.
Have you ever think your life without women???
International’s Women Day, will be celebrated tomorrow under the theme “Women in the Changing World of Work: Planet 50-50 by 2030”.
Women deserve equal pay, yet the gender pay gap is 23.1 per cent and a woman’s average superannuation balance at retirement is 52.8% less than a man’s.
Women are encouraged to not work, whether your job is paid or unpaid.
They have scheduled rallies and other events all over the world, including here in the Bay Area, to show opposition to the policies of the Trump administration and to make a big push for women’s equality.
Happy Women’s Day: Each and every Man belongs to woMan’s love, affection, and care.
“Do not just take any kind of woman but take the competent ones so that we can start changing that gender imbalance”.
It is as critical now as it was before, that we continue to challenge every day attitudes towards women. Here in the US, the “Day Without a Woman” is being organized by some of the groups that launched the Women’s March in Washington D.C. last January.
The International Women’s Day is a United Nations approved observance day to celebrate the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. The Ministry of Education, Innovation, Gender Relations and Sustainable Development has several activities planned throughout the month of March to bring attention to issues related to women.
The protest coincides with International Women’s Day, a global event that traces its origins to 1909. The strike aims to highlight the contributions women make to the economy and the impact they have on society despite discrimination, inequality and harassment.