| Advocacy and Activism |
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By using the media to highlight gender and HIV/AIDS issues, the Advocacy Project is strengthening citizen participation and government accountability. Why is Advocacy Necessary?Effective responses from government to gender based violence and the gendered dimensions of HIV and AIDS requires a dynamic relationship between civil society organizations, community members and local government. Each has a specific but interconnected role to play. Government has an obligation to deliver services. Community members, in turn, have a responsibility to advocate for their needs, to support and hold government accountable and to participate actively in community. At the same time, civil society organizations have a role to play in building the capacity of government to deliver on its commitments and to support active and empowered community members in their efforts to access services due to them. In South Africa a long history of determined activism, a progressive constitution, and existing health and safety related laws and structures provide significant leverage to gender related activism and advocacy. Section 9 (1) of the South African constitution “affirms the right of everyone to be equal before the law and to the equal protection and benefit of the law”. The accompanying bill of rights explicitly binds the legislature, executive, judiciary and all organs of state to the constitution. Section 12, subsection 2 of the bill of rights states that “Everyone has the right to bodily and psychological integrity, which includes the right (a) to make decisions concerning reproduction; and (b) to security in and control over their body” The constitution is far reaching in its explicit endorsement of substantive rather than merely formal rights and endorses affirmative measures as a means of achieving substantive equality. To ensure that government acts upon its obligations and translates rights into tangible services, community activists can use local structures such as those mandated by the Municipal Structures Act described above to monitor, support and hold accountable all government departments. Initiatives focused on working with men have not made much use of advocacy strategies and have instead relied more on community education. Shifting public perception that gender based violence affects us all and cannot be dismissed as a “women's issue” requires that men become more visible and outspoken about their opposition to gender based violence and demonstrate their willingness to take public stands against it-by joining marches, by engaging the media and by taking concerted efforts at the local level to demand justice. Advocacy InitiativesSome of the advocacy initiatives that Sonke Gender Justice is engaged in, include:
Global Advocacy InitiativesThe Sonke Gender Justice Network is also involved in a number of global advocacy initiatives including:
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