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Monday, 30 January 2012 12:37 |
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by Debra Hauser
In January 2012, Debra Hauser transitioned into her new role succeeding James Wagoner as Executive Director of Advocates for Youth. Together, they take a look at Advocates’ place in the movement, opportunities on the horizon, and lessons learned along the way.
Read James Wagoner's "Looking Back"
My first reflection as President of Advocates for Youth is what a kick it was to work hand-in-hand with James Wagoner. Sure, he had his idiosyncratic side (using terms like “troglodyte” to describe a recalcitrant Democratic Committee Chairman, or wearing his omni-present black T-shirt inside-out on occasion) but he was also visionary, authentic, transparent, and a really great friend. I’m going to miss him a great deal. But I’m also looking forward to a continuing partnership with James in his new role as a part-time advisor to the organization- particularly now that I might get a chance once in a while to tell him what to do!
But, seriously, I am both excited and newly energized to be taking over as Executive Director of Advocates for Youth. I love our cause and the young people we serve. I value Advocates’ staff for their passion and commitment to our issues. I admire and respect my colleagues in the field for their incredible expertise and steadfast work in challenging times. I am excited to continue collaborating on efforts to champion the sexual and reproductive health and rights of young people.
That said, I thought I would provide colleagues and friends of Advocates a sense of where I see the organization headed over the coming years – and perhaps a snapshot of my own priorities within that journey.
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Monday, 30 January 2012 12:34 |
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by James Wagoner
In January 2012, Debra Hauser transitioned into her new role succeeding James Wagoner as Executive Director of Advocates for Youth. Together, they take a look at Advocates’ place in the movement, opportunities on the horizon, and lessons learned along the way.
Read Debra Hauser's "Looking Forward"
December 31, 2011 marked my last day as Advocates for Youth’s Executive Director, a position I had held since 1997. As I look back on my time in this role, my first reflection is that time does indeed fly when you are having fun! Without doubt, the last fourteen years have been the best of my professional life, due to the incredible talent, commitment, and energy of my colleagues at Advocates and the field at large.
While I’m excited about continuing as a senior adviser to Advocates and engaging some new opportunities as a consultant, I already miss my co-strategist, thinker, and friend, Deb Hauser. Deb taught me the value of partnership in leadership; how adjusting the “fit” can dramatically improve a staff colleague’s performance; how effective decision making is an iterative process propelled by frank talk and honest differences of opinion; and how putting vision first not only builds a strong institutional brand but also helps regulate ego and other factors that undermine organizational culture. Simply put, she is the best - and Advocates for Youth, as well as our field in general, will benefit enormously from her leadership and collaboration.
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Monday, 30 January 2012 08:32 |
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by Emily Bridges, Director, Public Information Services
A study came out last weel that contradicts one of the anti-abortion movement's attempts to mislead the public: the common claim that abortion is bad for a woman's health.
Not so, says a study out this week in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology. From Reuters:
Researchers [in the United States] found that women were about 14 times more likely to die during or after giving birth to a live baby than to die from complications of an abortion.
It's not that surprising, since abortion procedures are very safe. Just two months ago, another study found that abortion does not cause women to have mental health problems. In fact, notes the leader of the research team:
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by Julia Reticker-Flynn, Manager, Youth Activist Network
From January 20 to 27, Advocates for Youth is joining the first-ever Trust Women Week, an online mass mobilization for women's lives and rights. This unique collaborative campaign is working with MoveOn.org and more than 50 organizations across the nation, including coordinating partner, the Trust Women/Silver Ribbon Campaign, to let legislators know that reproductive health, reproductive justice, and reproductive rights are at the top of our agenda and should be at the top of theirs, too. In this collaborative national action, messages from "virtual marchers," as the online participants are known, will be packaged and delivered directly to members of Congress, governors, and state legislators to underscore that Americans trust women to make their own decisions about their bodies and their lives.
Your Voice Counts! CLICK HERE to join the TRUST WOMEN WEEK Virtual March for Women's Lives and Rights.
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