The Real, Global March for Life
By Kim Lovell, Sierra Club Global Population and Environment Program Director
As we
finish celebrating a week that brought the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade and
a renewed commitment from President Obama to tackle climate disruption and
women's equality, protesters are gathering in Washington, D.C. for the 40th
annual "March for Life."
The
rally – which attracts religious leaders, school children bussed in from across
the country, and anti-choice activists to voice opposition to abortion access
and other reproductive rights – is ironically named. In fact, it’s a departure
from the real "march for life" that women and girls all over the
world must make to meet their basic needs. Every day, across the world, young
girls walk miles to attend secondary school, adolescents risk stigma and
violence to walk to a family planning clinic in a neighboring town, and mothers
are forced to venture further and further from home to find clean water for
their families. Livelihoods and health depend on those ‘marches for life’ --
and they demand immediate global attention.
Increasingly,
domestic and international organizations like the Sierra Club are recognizing
that these struggles for health and welfare are intricately connected – that a
woman's level of access to affordable contraceptives is innately tied to her
ability to adapt to a changing climate; that the opportunity to attend school
and delay marriage impacts community resource management and economic vitality.
Last
summer, at the Rio+20 Earth Summit, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
addressed this link in her conference address by saying that "to reach our
goals in sustainable development, we also have to ensure women's reproductive
rights." In other words, healthy families are essential to thriving
communities, and a sustainable planet depends on both.
Last
week, a group of women diverse in age, race, and background gathered at the
National Center for Science Education Conference to discuss the links between
gender and climate, and the essential role women play in climate disruption and
adaptation. The week before, a panel at the Woodrow Wilson
Center highlighted the need to connect family planning with larger development
goals on a policy and governance level, specifically enumerating the centrality
of reproductive health and rights to sectors like agriculture, climate, and
education. A great piece exploring themes from the event is available here.
As we
reflect on a week characterized by a celebration of choice, a dedication to
tackling climate disruption, and the attempt of some to "march for
life," let us not forget the real marches for life made every day by women
across the globe. We know the burden of these marches would be lessened by
addressing health access, sustainable development, sexual rights, and the
impacts of climate disruption in tandem. That would be something worth celebrating.