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Women

The Australian Greens believe that:
1. Women have the right to equal respect, responsibilities and rewards in society.

2. Women have the right to equal access and participation in decision-making processes in all areas of political, social, intellectual and economic endeavour.

3. Women have the right to freedom from violence.

4. Women have the right to equal pay for work of equal value, and to have their unpaid caring responsibilities acknowledged and properly valued throughout their lifetime.

5. Women have the right to make informed, supported choices about all aspects of their lives, including sexual identity, health, reproductive health processes, birthing and child-bearing, and how they balance participation in paid work with caring responsibilities.

6. Social structures which disadvantage women must be changed.

Matter of Public Interest: White Ribbon Day

Speech | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Wednesday 26th November 2008, 2:30pm

I rise tonight to address the issue of domestic violence in Australia.

Nine years ago today, the United Nations General Assembly declared that November 25, would be observed as the international day for the elimination of violence against women, with the white ribbon becoming the global symbol of solidarity.

The origins of 25 November as the International Day to eliminate violence against women go back more than four decades, when three Mirabal sisters from the Dominican Republic were killed for their political activism. The sisters became a symbol of the crisis of violence against women in Latin America, with November 25 proclaimed as the date to not only commemorate their lives, but also promote global recognition of gender-based violence.

Motion: White Ribbon Day

Speech | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 25th November 2008, 6:54pm

Moved jointly by Senator Scott Ludlam and Senator Hanson-Young.

That the Senate

(a) notes that:
(i) today marks the ninth anniversary of White Ribbon Day, the symbol of the United Nations’ International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women;
(ii) White Ribbon Day marks the start of 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence, a global event calling on action to end violence against women;

Time to sign CEDAW as Australian women Reclaim the Night

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Friday 31st October 2008, 11:06am

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has today, on the 30th anniversary of the annual Reclaim the Night campaign in Australia, called on the Federal Government to sign a key international agreement to protect women’s rights.

Australia is yet to sign the Optional Protocol to the United Nations’ Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (or CEDAW). The Optional Protocol would allow Australians to make complaints to the United Nations on matters of gender equality and women’s rights if all domestic efforts are fruitless.

“Reclaim the Night was established to highlight every woman’s basic human right to live in freedom from discrimination and fear of violence,” said Senator Hanson-Young.

“Yet more than two-thirds of women experience some form of physical or sexual violence in their lives.

“There should be no two ways about signing this Optional Protocol.

Matter of Public Interest: Paid Parental Leave

Speech | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Wednesday 15th October 2008, 12:40pm

I rise today to discuss the release of the Productivity Commission’s draft report entitled Paid Parental Leave: Support for Parents with Newborn Children handed down two weeks ago.

I must say that while many of us that have been talking about greater supports for working families for years were sceptical at the Government’s referral of parental supports to yet ‘another’ inquiry, the initial recommendations and proposed model put forward by the Productivity Commission have proved to be quite promising.

Support for “working families” is a platform that the Rudd Labor Government went to the 2007 election with, and while it is all very well for this term to be used as a mantra day in and day out, few will be convinced it means anything unless the Government commits to a paid parental leave scheme as a budget priority, to prove that support for Australian families is at the top of their policy agenda.

The fact that in 2008, Australia is still one of only two OECD countries without a national parental leave scheme is an indictment on both our current Government and Opposition.

Now more than ever the time to support working parents

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Wednesday 8th October 2008, 9:39am

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says that now more than ever, government-funded paid parental leave is a must to adequately support Australian families.

Senator Hanson-Young has responded to statements from Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan that recent global financial events could delay the introduction of such a paid parental leave scheme for Australia to beyond 2009.

“The Rudd Government, despite its track record of voting along with the Liberal Party against such a scheme, was encouragingly enthusiastic about being the Government to introduce paid parental leave when the Productivity Commission recommended it do so last week,” she said.

“Fast-forward a week, and rather than the priority paid parental leave was made out to be, it’s now been tossed into the too-hard basket.

Greens to push for 26 weeks' paid parental leave

Feature | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 30th September 2008, 1:30pm

Australia lags behind the rest of the world in supporting working parents, as one of only two OECD countries without any paid parental leave guaranteed for its workers.

The Greens will push for a 26-week government-funded paid parental leave scheme, to support parents in raising a happy and healthy next generation. You can read more about what Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has said on this important issue here.

Greens to push for 26 weeks’ paid parental leave

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 30th September 2008, 12:24pm

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young says the Greens will push for 26 weeks’ paid parental leave, saying that such a scheme will provide better support for parents and babies.

Yesterday the Greens welcomed the Productivity Commission’s recommendation for a government-funded 18-week paid parental leave scheme as a positive step in the right direction that was long overdue for working parents.

“Twenty-six weeks of paid parental leave is what the Greens are bringing to the table in this debate,” said Senator Hanson-Young.

“Twenty-six weeks’ leave following the birth of a child is what working parents need for a healthy and happy experience of birth and bonding.

“What the Greens are calling for is backed by a broad range of stakeholder organisations, from unions, to women’s groups and health organisations.”

Paid leave a no-brainer to support Australian parents

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Monday 29th September 2008, 1:01pm

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young today welcomed the Productivity Commission’s recommendation for a government-funded 18-week paid parental leave scheme, saying that such a proposal was long overdue for Australian workers.

The recommendation was made in the Productivity Commission’s initial report into paid parental leave, based on more than 250 submissions, which was released today.

“A paid parental leave scheme should be a no-brainer for the Government,” said Senator Hanson-Young.

Greens to defend Australian women’s reproductive rights

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 16th September 2008, 2:05pm

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has said the Greens will defend women’s rights against an attempt to make it harder for women to access safe, equitable and legal late-term pregnancy terminations.

A motion by Senator Guy Barnett to disallow Medicare funding of late-term terminations was today withdrawn, and instead will now be considered by the Finance and Public Administration Senate Committee.

Greens call for better support for parents

Media Release | Spokesperson Sarah Hanson-Young
Tuesday 2nd September 2008, 1:01pm

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has backed Parliamentary Secretary for Early Education and Childcare Maxine McKew’s call to reduce the current childcare ratio to one carer for every three babies.

“The Greens have long called for nationally consistent childcare standards, and to achieve carer-to-child ratios of at least one-to-three for children up to two years old, and one-to-four for children older than two years,” said Senator Hanson-Young.

Currently in Australia the dominant standard is one carer for every five babies.

Senator Hanson-Young also rejected claims by children’s author Mem Fox this week that placing young babies in formal care was a form of child abuse. “All Australian families should be able to access affordable, quality childcare if they so wish, without being made to feel guilty,” Senator Hanson-Young said.

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