Advocates' Blog
Advocates' Blog
World AIDS Day: December 1, 2010
Monday, 29 November 2010 20:13

Each year, December 1 marks World AIDS Day, when activists around the world come together to raise awareness of the global HIV epidemic, fight prejudice, and improve HIV education and HIV prevention.

This year's theme is "universal access and human rights" — an important reminder that much of the HIV-positive population, including young people, GLBTQ people, those affected by poverty, and marginalized groups like sex workers and injecting drug users still face unequal access to resources, services, and medication. And AIDS is the leading cause of death among women around the world. 

From December 1 through December 8, Advocates will be hosting a World AIDS Day blogathon on Amplify.  Learn more at www.amplifyyourvoice.org/worldaidsday!

 
Sex, Rights, and Climate Change
Monday, 29 November 2010 12:27

Raising Youth Voices at the 2010 United Nations Conference on Climate Change

Advocates for Youth and a number of organizations are working together to advance reproductive and environmental justice for youth at the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in Cancun, Mexico, being held from November 30-December 10, 2010.

Three of Advocates' International Year of Youth journalists are attending the meeting to elevate young people's sexual and reproductive health and rights issues within the dialogue. They are reporting from the conference daily about if and how governments are addressing the intersection between climate change mitigation and sexual and reproductive health and rights.

Learn more about how the issues intersect at www.amplifyyourvoice.org/climatechange

 
Tell Congress to Support the Dream Act
Friday, 26 November 2010 08:43

The next two weeks could be the most important weeks in the lives of thousands of young people in America. After ten years, the House and Senate will finally vote on the DREAM Act, a bill that would provide a pathway to citizenship for undocumented young people (known as “DREAMers”) who have grown up in the United States after being brought to the country as children.

Click here to take action. 

 
79 Countries Agree: We Don't Have to Protect LGBT People from Execution Anymore
Tuesday, 23 November 2010 08:23

by Nikki Serapio, Manager, New Media Strategies

The UN General Assembly’s Third Committee, which is responsible for various social, humanitarian, and core human rights issues, voted last week to remove sexual orientation from a UN resolution condemning extrajudicial, summary, and arbitrary executions. The International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission provides a summary of the decision:

Read more...
 
Advocates for Youth Urges Immediate Ratification of CEDAW
Wednesday, 17 November 2010 17:01

Editor's Note: Advocates for Youth has prepared and submitted the following testimony in advance of tomorrow's U.S. Senate hearing on the ratification of the Convention for Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women:

Dear Chairman Durbin, Ranking Member Coburn, and Members of the Subcommittee:

Advocates for Youth is pleased to submit this statement in strong support of ratification of the Convention for Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women [CEDAW].

Established in 1980 as the Center for Population Options, Advocates for Youth champions efforts that help young people make informed and responsible decisions about their reproductive and sexual health. We believe we can best serve the field by boldly advocating for a more positive and realistic approach to adolescent sexual health. This approach is based on the core values of Rights. Respect. Responsibility.©  

Youth have the right to accurate and complete sexual health information, confidential reproductive and sexual health services, and a secure stake in the future. Youth deserve respect. Valuing young people means involving them in the design, implementation, and evaluation of programs that affect their health and well-being.  And society has the responsibility to provide young people with the tools they need to safeguard their sexual health while young people have the responsibility to protect themselves from too-early childbearing and sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.  

Read more...
 
Honoring All Veterans on Veterans Day
Thursday, 11 November 2010 09:07

by Emily Bridges, Director of Public Information Services

Two news stories today highlight the stupidity and unfairness of our nation's policy of barring gays from the military.  


The first:  The ACLU has filed a class-action suit against the Department of Defense.  The DoD has decided to cut the "separation pay" for service members discharged because of homosexuality, in half.

You get separation pay if you've served honorably for six years or more.

So, should you serve in our nation's armed forces for six YEARS, and should you be discovered to be GLBTQ, you may look forward not only to the injustice and humiliation of being discharged for no actual reason, but you're going to get half the pay another honorably discharged member might.  

This is a policy separate from Don't Ask Don't Tell itself.  The Obama Administration's Defense Department has simply decided to implement the separation pay cut all on its own.  Contacted by the ACLU, the DoD refused to revise the policy.

 

Read more...
 
Celebration of African Youth Day and commemorating the International Youth Year: Day 1
Wednesday, 10 November 2010 08:56

 

Editor's Note: The following post was written by Nana Boateng, an Advocates for Youth International Youth Blogger. Nana is from Ghana and recently attended the 1st African Youth Development Forum. She shares her experiences from the meeting below.


 In Addis Ababa, looking everywhere, colorful shawls, beautiful women and smiley men, I lick my lips as the cold dry weather cracks it. The Conference was officially opened on the 1st of November at the UN offices in Addis. Ethiopia’s President, Girma Woldegiorgis was there as was Youth Groups, Diplomats and Ministers. The ceremony was pretty short especially for a select Youth who had to leave after the first session to the Ghion Hotel for a youth lead forum in preparation for the African Union Summit in July 2011.

Over the conference hall at Ghion is art work so stunning! My eyes stroll up at the various frames. Two women stare at me naked chested, their hands covering their ears with tears walking down their faces. I wonder if they too are tired already from the talk shops. In one cliché or the other, speaker after speaker acknowledge African youth are Africa’s largest resource at the opening ceremony and the forum. One thing is clear, African leaders have good intentions for youth. Why then are the young women up the ceiling still crying?  

Read more...
 
Obama throws a bone to the abstinence-only lobby
Thursday, 04 November 2010 14:30

But will young people pay the price?

Advocates for Youth Staff

Advocates for Youth President James Wagoner spoke to Washington Post writer Rob Stein about the millions of dollars the HHS has recently given in grants for failed abstinence-only programs. 

 "They are funding programs that censor information about condoms and birth control and have elements that are clearly ideological and not science-based," said James.  "I think the Obama administration is stretching the limits so it can 'give something to the other side...Young people will end up paying the price."

Read the Washington Post Article

 
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