Difference between revisions of "The Pussyhat Resistance"

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(Created page with "Who would have thought in 2021 that in 10 years by 2030 the world would be able to accomplish its goal of 100% electrification for everyone? Back in 2021 this seemed like an asymptotic dream with around 10% (760 million) of world population still living in darkness. The majority (78%) of these people were in the Sub-Saharan Africa region. The region was for long a witness of some of the major conflicts and exploitations for resources like minerals, oil etc. Add to t...")
 
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Who would have thought in 2021 that in 10 years by 2030 the world would be able to accomplish its goal of 100% electrification for everyone?
Who would have thought that over the span of ten years, what started as a 15-second social media platform could mobilize millions of women around the world towards the future of gender equality?  


   
   
Back in 2021 this seemed like an asymptotic dream with around 10% (760 million) of world population still living in darkness. The majority (78%) of these people were in the Sub-Saharan Africa region. The region was for long a witness of some of the major conflicts and exploitations for resources like minerals, oil etc. Add to that political instability, racial abuse, health epidemics and the region was left behind compared to the rest of the world in terms of development goals.
In the late-2010s, a considerable number of feminist movements emerged in the Western hemisphere, particularly in the United States and gained momentum worldwide amid a changing political landscape.  


   
   
While the world seemed to be progressing steadily towards the goal of 100% electrification as part of UN SDG7 of affordable and clean energy, the progress was reversed to a certain extent by the Covid pandemic in 2020-21. Shift in government priorities, supply chain disruptions and social distancing measures slowed progress in decentralized energy access areas. According to some experts in 2022, it would have taken approximately $35 billion USD to be spent annually till 2030 to ensure universal access to electricity alongside clean cooking.  
When millions of people stormed the streets in women’s marches to proclaim their outrage and despair at the inauguration of Donald J. Trump, no one knew whether it was a moment or a movement. Pink hats became the emblem of the marches, as a reference to Mr. Trump’s comments, caught on tape, bragging about kissing women and grabbing their genitals without their consent. The emergence of the tape just before the election provoked an outpouring of women testifying about sexual harassment under the #MeToo and #TimesUp hashtag.  


   
   
As the effects of Covid-19 pandemic started to go down by 2023-24, it became quite apparent to governments and agencies like the United Nations that SDG7 was in threat of being met by 2030 if not acted upon quickly and swiftly. Not only was it important to meet this goal to ensure basic equity but to also meet climate goals with everyone getting access to clean cooking energy. Investment started flowing in from World Bank, IMF, Nonprofits, CSR Foundations and companies jumped in the projects given the foreseen opportunities to expand their customer base and be at the forefront of a new market. The new projects aimed not only on increasing grid connected generation of electricity from renewables but also towards bringing down costs of small scale solar photovoltaic systems. These stand-alone systems could act as mini grids and were the key in solving the challenge of universal access of affordable electricity to millions in a decentralized way.  
Without knowing it, the so-called Women’s March started to shape a new form of feminism over the course of the following decade: the Pussyhat Resistance, a coalition of empowered women worldwide focused on raising awareness about women's issues and advancing human rights by promoting dialogue and innovation through the arts, education and intellectual discourse. 
 
 
The TPR movement catharsis than clarity. Its full statement of principles runs more than 1,000 words and includes issues ranging from reproductive rights to gender justice, from the minimum wage to immigration reform, from clean water to criminal profiling to arming police with military-grade weaponry.  
 
“It’s messy, and that’s the beauty of it,” one of its founders said in an interview through Twitter.
 
The Pussyhat Resistance resembles the second-wave of physical and radical activism. Generally, second-wave feminism is defined by an active political fight that requires the disruption of power structures through participation in public demonstrations against patriarchal suppression.  
 
Advances in global education, health and technology have helped empower individuals like never before, leading to increased demands for transparency and participation in government and public decision-making. These changes will continue and are ushering in a new era in human history in which, in the immediate short term, more people will be middle class than poor, bolstered by the demographic boom in Sub-Saharan and North Africa, Southeast Asia and India.
 
Today, in 2032 and despite major commitments and important progress made, women’s universal human rights are still far from a reality today. Patriarchal, authoritarian, economic and social norms, beliefs, structures, and systems perpetuate inequality, human rights violations, and environmental destruction - while disproportionately affecting women.


   
   
Through 2024-2027 these mini grid projects were implemented across Democratic Republic of Congo, Pakistan, Nigeria, Uganda, Sudan, Tanzania, and Niger – 7 countries with almost 50% of global population without access to electricity. The projects saw the highest reduction in the number of people yet to be covered by electricity in one single year. By 2027 the number was down to 250 million. The case studies from these projects and evidence of impact were being taken to other countries and governments to ensure 100% electrification by 2030.
In 2022, China joined Canada, Mexico, The United States and Sweden by stepping up and explicitly labeling their development assistance and foreign policy as feminist. Over the past two decades, there have been significant improvements for women and girls — particularly in the areas of health and education.  


   
   
The electrification mini grids not only brought light to many households, but the project also saw trickle down effects in other areas as well for these countries. There was a drastic reduction in crime, both on the streets as well inside households. The number of reported physical abuse cases against women went down along with other criminal cases. Now with these households having electricity there was a movement by local and international NGOs to provide these households with access to basic smartphones and the internet. This meant that children in these households could now go to school and have some access to blended learning models as well.
So far, over 100 countries have taken actions to track budget allocations for gender equality. However, tangible laws to ensure that women can have equitable access to opportunities seem blurry and distant.  


   
   
The project also created job opportunities for the local people in the renewable energy sector. To minimize costs and keep the project within budget, local people were recruited and trained. Women then became the ambassadors of the mini-grid program in their village and districts and sparked their interest in electricity, automation, and technology. They would not only promote the benefits of the same but also help implement and repair mini-grid systems in other households. This created a win-win scenario for all the stakeholders involved, and mostly to the communities.   
A group of 2,000 people —90 per cent of whom were women— across seven regions in Albania developed community-based scorecards in 2024. Using the newly launched WhatsApp For Communities, their collaborative work rated how well their communities are doing in involving women in public decision-making, stopping gender-based violence, advancing women’s economic well-being and providing social services.   


   
   
With light came not only the interest in learning, but it also brought the possibility to access information, to improve safety in remote locations, and to study during the night after a workday. As most of the workers in these areas are women, they saw it as a possibility to improve their lives and their family. New possibilities were at their hands with more education, and now poor communities were led by women and connected to the world to build new futures.  
In 2025, a group of 300 women under the name the Noun Sisters in Cameroon came together to support single mothers who protested against the practice of forced, early marriages. The protests were sparked when a widowed, 17-year-old mother was last week being forced to marry her dead husband’s brother. The marriage was called off after the demonstrations, organized through Facebook.


   
   
By 2030 the mini grid solar projects were scaled to other countries which still had population not connected with electricity. Parallelly there was a movement to promote the use of solar and induction cookers to ensure clean energy usage for cooking. While the goal of 100% access to affordable electrification could be almost met by 2030 with 99.3% population now having covered by it.
Bolivia’s Congress legalised abortions up to the 14th week of pregnancy in 2026, a ground-breaking move for a country that has some of the world's most restrictive termination laws. Thousands of women took the street to emulate Argentina’s “green tide” movement that helped deliver sweeping abortion reform in one of Latin America’s most Catholic countries, with 94% religious' majority. Until now, abortions were only permitted in cases of rape or when the mother's health was at risk.  


   
   
In 2030, the world was an almost equal place with electricity serving as a great equalizer for the 10% of world population which was living in darkness as of 2021. The access to affordable electricity not only brought literal light into their homes but also access to technology, information, education and a better chance to be able to work for a sustainable livelihood. Light brings brighter futures!
During 2028, local activist Gauri Saudar went viral on TikTok when more than half a million women In the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh showed up to a 5-day strike demanding for better working conditions. In there, a bull works 1,064 hours, a man 1,212 hours, and a woman 3,845 hours in a year  on a one-hectare farm. In India or the South Asian narrative,  women’s  work doubles as they not only contribute heavily on the field but also take care of the household, thus making them more profit generators than the men.  Yet the share of land, profit and income is low in comparison with men.


   
   
Shortly after, a massive women protest in China in 2030 demanded immediate family planning solutions and maternal health, looking to expand the number of health workers and develop emergency services and maternal-health services in rural areas. Alibaba offered to voluntarily improve supply chains for the delivery of contraceptives and expanding sex education in schools are also important measures.


What's happening now feels like something new again. It's defined by technology: tools that are allowing women to build a strong, popular, reactive movement online. Online is where activists meet and plan their activism, and it’s where feminist discourse and debate takes place. Digital tools have multiplied collective power around the world. And it’s here to stay.


==Sources==  
==Sources==  




https://www.iea.org/reports/sdg7-data-and-projections/access-to-electricity 
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/moviesnow/la-with-hunger-games-mockingjay-part-2-theaters-katniss-feminism-lawrence-20151119-story.html


https://ourworldindata.org/energy-access#access-to-electricity 
https://www.tor.com/2012/03/21/why-katniss-is-a-feminist-character-and-its-not-because-she-wields-a-bow-and-beats-boys-up/#:~:text=When%20Katniss%20befriends%20Rue%2C%20she,in%20the%20face%20of%20oppression.&text=While%20Katniss%20is%20analytical%20and,she's%20often%20incapacitated%20by%20it.


https://www.ifc.org/wps/wcm/connect/news_ext_content/ifc_external_corporate_site/news+and+events/news/energy2equal-africa
https://www.unwomen.org/en/what-we-do/leadership-and-political-participation/womens-movements


https://jpia.princeton.edu/news/powering-households-and-empowering-women-gendered-effects-electrification-sub-saharan-africa
https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/07/13/pandemic-womens-movement-social-media-internet-activism/


https://aweap.africa/aweap-introduction/
https://www.vox.com/2018/3/20/16955588/feminism-waves-explained-first-second-third-fourth


https://borgenproject.org/women-in-africans-energy-sector/
https://home.kpmg/xx/en/home/insights/2013/10/rise-of-the-individual.html

Revision as of 12:59, 10 December 2021

Who would have thought that over the span of ten years, what started as a 15-second social media platform could mobilize millions of women around the world towards the future of gender equality?


In the late-2010s, a considerable number of feminist movements emerged in the Western hemisphere, particularly in the United States and gained momentum worldwide amid a changing political landscape.


When millions of people stormed the streets in women’s marches to proclaim their outrage and despair at the inauguration of Donald J. Trump, no one knew whether it was a moment or a movement. Pink hats became the emblem of the marches, as a reference to Mr. Trump’s comments, caught on tape, bragging about kissing women and grabbing their genitals without their consent. The emergence of the tape just before the election provoked an outpouring of women testifying about sexual harassment under the #MeToo and #TimesUp hashtag.


Without knowing it, the so-called Women’s March started to shape a new form of feminism over the course of the following decade: the Pussyhat Resistance, a coalition of empowered women worldwide focused on raising awareness about women's issues and advancing human rights by promoting dialogue and innovation through the arts, education and intellectual discourse.


The TPR movement catharsis than clarity. Its full statement of principles runs more than 1,000 words and includes issues ranging from reproductive rights to gender justice, from the minimum wage to immigration reform, from clean water to criminal profiling to arming police with military-grade weaponry.


“It’s messy, and that’s the beauty of it,” one of its founders said in an interview through Twitter.


The Pussyhat Resistance resembles the second-wave of physical and radical activism. Generally, second-wave feminism is defined by an active political fight that requires the disruption of power structures through participation in public demonstrations against patriarchal suppression.


Advances in global education, health and technology have helped empower individuals like never before, leading to increased demands for transparency and participation in government and public decision-making. These changes will continue and are ushering in a new era in human history in which, in the immediate short term, more people will be middle class than poor, bolstered by the demographic boom in Sub-Saharan and North Africa, Southeast Asia and India.


Today, in 2032 and despite major commitments and important progress made, women’s universal human rights are still far from a reality today. Patriarchal, authoritarian, economic and social norms, beliefs, structures, and systems perpetuate inequality, human rights violations, and environmental destruction - while disproportionately affecting women.


In 2022, China joined Canada, Mexico, The United States and Sweden by stepping up and explicitly labeling their development assistance and foreign policy as feminist. Over the past two decades, there have been significant improvements for women and girls — particularly in the areas of health and education.


So far, over 100 countries have taken actions to track budget allocations for gender equality. However, tangible laws to ensure that women can have equitable access to opportunities seem blurry and distant.


A group of 2,000 people —90 per cent of whom were women— across seven regions in Albania developed community-based scorecards in 2024. Using the newly launched WhatsApp For Communities, their collaborative work rated how well their communities are doing in involving women in public decision-making, stopping gender-based violence, advancing women’s economic well-being and providing social services.


In 2025, a group of 300 women under the name the Noun Sisters in Cameroon came together to support single mothers who protested against the practice of forced, early marriages. The protests were sparked when a widowed, 17-year-old mother was last week being forced to marry her dead husband’s brother. The marriage was called off after the demonstrations, organized through Facebook.


Bolivia’s Congress legalised abortions up to the 14th week of pregnancy in 2026, a ground-breaking move for a country that has some of the world's most restrictive termination laws. Thousands of women took the street to emulate Argentina’s “green tide” movement that helped deliver sweeping abortion reform in one of Latin America’s most Catholic countries, with 94% religious' majority. Until now, abortions were only permitted in cases of rape or when the mother's health was at risk.


During 2028, local activist Gauri Saudar went viral on TikTok when more than half a million women In the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh showed up to a 5-day strike demanding for better working conditions. In there, a bull works 1,064 hours, a man 1,212 hours, and a woman 3,845 hours in a year on a one-hectare farm. In India or the South Asian narrative, women’s work doubles as they not only contribute heavily on the field but also take care of the household, thus making them more profit generators than the men. Yet the share of land, profit and income is low in comparison with men.


Shortly after, a massive women protest in China in 2030 demanded immediate family planning solutions and maternal health, looking to expand the number of health workers and develop emergency services and maternal-health services in rural areas. Alibaba offered to voluntarily improve supply chains for the delivery of contraceptives and expanding sex education in schools are also important measures.


What's happening now feels like something new again. It's defined by technology: tools that are allowing women to build a strong, popular, reactive movement online. Online is where activists meet and plan their activism, and it’s where feminist discourse and debate takes place. Digital tools have multiplied collective power around the world. And it’s here to stay.


Sources

https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/moviesnow/la-with-hunger-games-mockingjay-part-2-theaters-katniss-feminism-lawrence-20151119-story.html

https://www.tor.com/2012/03/21/why-katniss-is-a-feminist-character-and-its-not-because-she-wields-a-bow-and-beats-boys-up/#:~:text=When%20Katniss%20befriends%20Rue%2C%20she,in%20the%20face%20of%20oppression.&text=While%20Katniss%20is%20analytical%20and,she's%20often%20incapacitated%20by%20it.

https://www.unwomen.org/en/what-we-do/leadership-and-political-participation/womens-movements

https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/07/13/pandemic-womens-movement-social-media-internet-activism/

https://www.vox.com/2018/3/20/16955588/feminism-waves-explained-first-second-third-fourth

https://home.kpmg/xx/en/home/insights/2013/10/rise-of-the-individual.html