User:Vcrs

'''Vcrs travels a lot, teaches social studies and has eclectic interests. She lives in the U.S.'''

higher priority

 * Carrying Capacity: insert referenced/cited "critiques of application to humans" section detailing work of Boserup and Netting and others.


 * De-merge Tibetan funerary practices from the sky burial page; re-create Tibetan Sky Burial page (*sigh*).
 * Create separate page for Zoroastrian funerary practices.
 * Make Sky burial a short page of links directing users to each of these, since generalizations about these practices are really untenable.


 * Merge Strangler Fig into Banyan

lower priority

 * LGBT rights in Iran: implement changes proposed by user 66.92.130.180 on the article's talk page. Clean up style etc.


 * Add page for milagro as votive.


 * Make Ulu Camii its own page (currently in Bursa%2C Turkey page)


 * make page for Şehzade mosque & clean up Sinan page; add photos


 * do that research on Cabrini-Green tenant activism


 * Add pages for Kor River and Abarqu

my perennial to-do list
complete with gratuitous and sometimes amusingly inaccurate wiki-linking:


 * grade papers
 * write lesson plans
 * vacuum
 * meditate
 * use the treadmill
 * walk the dogs

crossed off the list: things i no longer have to do now that i live in the city again (yay!):
 * take out the compost
 * go to the post office
 * fill bird feeders
 * go to the gym
 * mow the lawn

PaVEM article draft
PaVEM, the Dutch government's Committee for Participation of Women of Ethnic Minority Groups (in Dutch: | Participatie van Vrouwen uit Etnische Minderheden), worked from 2003 to 2005 to improve the access of and participation by ethnic minority women in social movements, and thus to facilitate minority women's integration into Dutch society. The committee is of interest internationally because so many countries are dealing with similar issues in their societies.

Establishment
PaVEM was establihsed in 2003 under the second Balkenende cabinet. The initiative was spearheaded by Rita Verdonk, then Minister of Immigration and Integration, and Aart Jan de Geus, then Minister of Social Affairs and Employment.

Membership
Membership of the committee remained constant throughout its existence and comprised the following:
 * Paul Rosenmöller, Committee Chair (former Member of Parliament and former President of the Green Left Party)
 * Hans de Boer (former President of MKB-Nederland)
 * Lilian Callender (Director of the School of Economics of INHOLLAND University; originally from Suriname)
 * Hans Dijkstal (former Minister, former President of the VVD, former Member of Parliament)
 * Crown Princess Máxima
 * Yasemin Tümer (managing director of KPMG; originally from Turkey )

PaVEM was always intended to be a short-term committee with an emphasis on "speed and effectiveness;" according to one of its members, it was for this purpose peopled with "movers and shakers" who were expected to get things done. Specifically, these members included the Argentinian-born Crown Princess Máxima, as well as two other immigrant women who had achieved a high level of educational and professional success, along with three powerful and experienced politicians.

Strategies and Goals
Some of the main strategies of PaVEM were to improve minority women's access to employment; to remove barriers to their acquiring fluency in the Dutch language; to help municipalities engage more effectively in dialogue with immigrants; to reduce anti-immigrant sentiment, racism and oversimplification of immigrant issues in public discourse; and to develop a network of 'successful' immigrant women who could be mobilized to work on relevant participation projects. Tümer described the strategy as one of reaching the whole immigrant communities through the women of those communities, and described the group's vision as, "Don’t leave reports behind, [instead] leave insight, action, examples, agreements, [and] inspired people."

Conclusions and Transformation
At its closing meeting in 2005, the committee reported the following achievements: municipalities had established a "participation agenda," covering four key areas: language, work, social dialogue, and participation. Rural structures had also been put in place spanning public sector, private sector, and social movement participants. A national action plan had also been firmly set for the integration of the 240,000 women still lacking Dutch language fluency, including a program to bring language lessons to rural women in their homes. Finally, a Rural Participation Team had been established, comprised of thirty socially and economically successful immigrant women who committed to be available as liaisons between rural immigrant women and various Dutch institutions.

The committee thus ceased to exist with its previous membership and as a government project, but a new NGO, a foundation called PaFemme, was formed to continue PaVEM's work. Its stated goal is to facilitate the participation of "black, migrant and refugee women" with "an emphasis on economic independence."