European Women's Lobby
The European Women's Lobby is the largest umbrella organization of women's associations in the European Union, founded in 1990, working to promote women's rights and equality between women and men, and representing a total of more than 2000 organizations. EWL membership extends to organizations in all 27 EU member states and the three candidate countries, as well as to European-wide bodies.
With a secretariat based in Brussels, Belgium, the EWL is one of the longest-standing European level NGOs, and works closely with European institutions and civil society partners. At the international level, the EWL has a consultative status at the Council of Europe, and participates regularly in the activities of the UN Commission on the Status of Women.
History
European women's organizations had conferences as early as 1982 to create a structure of cooperation within the EEC. Among the leading figures were Fausta Deshormes, Hilde Albertini, Odile Quitin, Liliana Richetta, Helga Thieme, and Jacqueline de Groote. In November 1987 in London, 120 women, members of 85 organizations representing 50 million individual members, came together, and adopted two resolutions. The first called for the "creation of a structure for influence, open to all interested women's organizations, to exert pressure on European and national institutions to ensure better defence and representation of women's interest". In a second resolution, the delegates called upon the European Commission to "lend its support for the organization in early 1988 of a meeting with a view to the implementation of such a structure". Support was granted, and the European Women's Lobby and its secretariat in Brussels were formally established in 1990. The EWL was founded in 1990 by Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Spain, The Netherlands, and the United Kingdom national coordinations and 17 large European-wide women's organizations.At the time, just twelve countries formed the European Union, then known as the European Communities. Over the years, as new Member States joined the EC, new national co-ordinations became members of the EWL. While the EU enlarged to countries of Central and Eastern Europe, the EWL established links and cooperation with women's organizations in these countries.
The European Women's Lobby was created in response to a growing awareness of the need to defend women's interests at the European level, since:
- Equality between women and men is one of the missions of the European Union, which has a strong competence to adopt legislation in this area affecting all women and men living in Europe.
- The scope of the European Union's activities were, and continue to be, extending, and affect areas with a direct effect on women's daily lives, particularly with the establishment of the internal market.
- It became urgent for women and their organizations to participate in the programs established by the Union, and to get acquainted with European legislation affecting them.
- The creation of such an organization, and its designation of lobbying, also corresponds to the particular character of the European-level decision-making process, which allows space for the creation of many organizations, founded to represent all types of interest groups and categories of the public.
- These organizations were responding to a real need on the part of the European institutions. Contrary to perceived ideas, the number of European officials is low, the institutions therefore often call on experts in the course of their work, due in particular to the diversity of the Member States' people and legislation.
- As decision-makers within the European institutions are not directly elected by the citizens, with the exception of the European Parliament, the creation of organizations such as the EWL also corresponds to the need to fill the democratic gap between the EU institutions and the citizens.
Theory of change
- EWL Members and the wider feminist movement work in solidarity with each other across Europe and internationally
- We use effective and accessible communication, including digital communications, to shift values and behaviours that discriminate against women
- We build awareness, promote feminisms, and empower all citizens to fight patriarchy
- Feminist leadership works to eradicate stereotypes and engage men and women to participate in and influence democratic processes
- Legislation and public policy support women's equal control over, and access to, spaces, resources, and services
Objectives
The EWL believes in a feminist Europe in which an end to gender inequality is not only possible, but imperative, to achieve the well-being of all people and the planet. Its vision is holistic, transformational socio-economic, based on well-being, equality, social justice, and with a powerful voice against women's poverty. EWL envisions a culture in which women enjoy equal rights and participation in re-imagined power and decision-making structures, in which all forms of violence against women has been eliminated, and women have been liberated from all forms of oppression.
EWL's mission is a credible source of expertise and experience on equality between women and men and women's rights, representing the diversity of the women's movement across the European Union; to represent an inclusive, confident, loud, independent feminist voice and bring real women's voices into the EU political arena; to build consensus and mobilize the EWF members' collective experience to work on major issues affecting women, to realize women's rights, equality between women and men, and social justice. To act as a catalyst connecting different actors and organizations to bring change at EU level.
In a strategy framework from 2016-2020, the European Women's Lobby, through its member organizations, aims:
- To raise more, better, and sustainable funding for women.
- To work together effectively at different levels and in different contexts: local, national, European Union, and international.
- To promote and debate diversity, advancing consensus, and strengthen our collective voice.
- To put an end to all forms of violence against women and girls, and promote a society of peace, human security, and dignity.
- To challenge and change the culture of sexism and stereotypes, and promote positive roles for women and men.
- To promote the feminist transformation of a sustainable economy based on new economic models based on equality, well-being, care, and social justice.
- To position women at the heart of political, social, and economic participation and decision-making.
- To ensure sustainable and strong institutional mechanisms for equality between women and men at EU level.