Where are the women for all these boards? Heh!

By D. Alissa Trotz

Alissa Trotz is editor of the

In the Diaspora Column.

 

In the last two weeks, there has been a robust and outraged response by individuals and various organizations (SASOD, Citizens Against Rape, Help & Shelter, GRPA, Red Thread, ChildLink Inc., GAWL) to the abysmal lack of gender representation on the newly formed boards. The Guyana Human Rights Association issued a statement in which they drew public attention to the fact that “although the Government has only announced the full membership of 20 out of the 32 boards thus far, only 18% are females which represents 22 persons out of a possible 125; and of that figure, one woman serves on three boards and another on two. Both women are employees of the Ministry of Finance.”

20130902diasporaThe newly elected administration has since indicated that it will likely be revisiting the question of appointments and the criteria for selection, and it is a good thing that they appear to be responding to the concerns raised by the public. Vigilance is key and we need to hold those elected officials accountable. Just yesterday, the Guyana Chronicle reported that according to the Honourable Minister of Public Infrastructure David Patterson, the National Task Force will be holding its first meeting later this month. Headed by Major General (rt’d) Joe Singh, of the named members so far, there is not a single woman but we hope that women have been invited and that they will also be asked to join and to name others to join them.

There have been several lively exchanges on this issue, including in social media, about whether Guyana is better or worse on these questions than other countries. Some have even asked, ‘well, where are all these women that you expect to sit on these boards?’, implying that the issue is that they simply do not exist. In response, five women got together and brainstormed for just an hour with pencil and paper, to come up with a list of names that was subsequently added to overnight by a few other women and that is offered today for our readers. To be clear, this list was never meant to be exhaustive or without mistakes. It represents Guyanese women who are predominantly professional, middle-class, and Georgetown-based. The list does not always sufficiently identify the specific competencies that individuals might bring to particular boards. Most importantly, we want to emphasise that none of the women whose name appears here was approached by those who came up with the list, so we cannot speak to their interest or availability. We offer this list as one starting point, and in the hope that it will encourage others to add to it, widening it, ensuring regional, age, racial and ethnic diversity. As readers can see from the over one hundred names listed below, it is not a question of there not being enough women in Guyana to sit on the boards. It seems ridiculous to even have to say this, but then who would have expected, in the aftermath of an electoral campaign that appeared to emphasise gender justice, that the announcement of nominees to boards would have been so badly skewed?

Next week’s diaspora column, written by historian Nigel Westmaas, begins by emphasizing that “for the Cummingsburg Accord to work it must reject the old political culture and focus on national unity, no matter how difficult the process, as a key ingredient of its political and social mission.” It is in that spirit that we offer the names below, reminding our readers and the new administration that the prohibition of gender-based discrimination is guaranteed by the Guyanese Constitution:

“Women’s participation in the various management and decision processes whether private, public or state shall be encouraged and facilitated by laws enacted for that purpose or otherwise” (Article 29).

“Every woman is entitled to equal rights and status with men in all spheres of political, economic and social life. All forms of discrimination against women on the basis of gender or sex are illegal” (Article 149(F(1).

“Every woman is entitled to equal access with men to academic, vocational and professional training, equal opportunities in employment, remuneration and promotion and in social, political and cultural activity” (Article 149(F(2).

Valerie Alleyne-Odle – economist

Emily Allicock – businesswoman/administrator/indigenous

Paulette Allicock – researcher/ leader/ indigenous peoples

Anasha Ally – businesswoman

Susan Allsopp – businesswoman

Sadie Amin –lawyer

Andaiye – gender advocate

Renuka Anandjit – administrator/youth peer educator/gender

Annette Arjoon – businesswoman/sustainable development

Barbara Atherley – educator

Joycelyn Bacchus – gender advocate

Sara Bharrat – writer

Dawn Gregory – lawyer

Anna Benjamin – historian

Myrna Bernard – educator, social scientist

Carol Bishop – educator

Carole James Boston – lawyer

Karen Boyle – microbiologist

Andrea Brathwaithe – businesswoman

Jennifer Bulkan – dentist

Kathlyn Burch-Smith small business

Allison Butters-Grant – businesswoman

Paulette Bynoe – scientist

Gomin Camacho – environmentalist/youth leader

Mena Carto – administration/ Pharmacy

Indranie Chandarpal – women’s rights/ administrator

Iris Chin-See – medical practitioner

Marie-Anne Cholmondeley – management specialist

Renata Chuck-A-Sang – businesswoman/engineer/gender advocate

Pat Coates – businesswoman

Karen Van Sluytman Corbin – labour unionist/gender advocate

Liz Cox- insurance executive

Marlene Cox – education (science)

Maxine Cummings – agronomist

Karen Davis – mass communications

Angelique Degroot – businesswoman

Pere Deroy – gender and development

Karen DeSouza – gender advocate

Denise Dias – businesswoman

Emily Dodson – lawyer

Jocelyn Dow – businesswoman/sustainable development

Desiree Edghill – mass communications

Merlene Ellis – artist/businesswoman

Louanna Fernandes – businesswoman

Nicolette Fernandes – sports

Desiree Field-Ridley – economist

Carole Fletcher – scientist

Yolande Foo – economist

Dawn Fox – scientist

Ameena Gafoor – businesswoman, literary critic

Laura George – indigenous rights

Roxane George – lawyer/judge

Sara Gordon – health promotion/Health Education specialist

Joan Green – small business development

Evelyn Hamilton – economist

Natasha Hamilton – banking

Beverley Harper – businesswoman

Elisabeth Harper – foreign affairs

Bonita Harris – educator

Derry Harry – medical practitioner

Keisha Holder – scientist

Melissa Ifill – political scientist

Janice Imhoff – medical doctor/writer

Lisa Insanally – businesswoman

Janice Jackson – psychologist/educator

Leila Jagdeo – educator

Donna Ramsammy James – businesswoman

Melinda Janki – lawyer/human rights

Joyce Jonas – educator/author CXC textbooks/student guides

Jocelyn Josiah – communication and media specialist

Halimah Khan – gender advocate

Iman Khan – businesswoman

Christine King – businesswoman

Sandra Kurtzious – lawyer

Claudette La Bennett – retired judge

Patrice La Fleur – programme administrator / social work

Jean La Rose – indigenous affairs

Veronica Langford – businesswoman

Margaret Lawrence – mass communications

Gem Madhoo-Nascimento – cultural producer

Omattie Madray – child advocate

Dr Priya Maharaj Simone Mangal – geologist, oil & gas specialist

Nichola Marcus – gender advocate

Cynthia Massay – physiotherapist, administrator

Maureen Byrne Massiah -Educator

Ayanna McAlmont – lawyer

Sabine McIntosh – disability rights advocate

Akima McPherson – artist

Maureen Marks-Mendonca – writer

Shirley Melville – businesswoman/indigenous peoples

Merle Mendonca – human rights /administrator

Michele Ming – optometrist

Sherlina Nageer – public health

Sonia Noel – designer/businesswoman

Paloma Mohamed – sociologist/educator/cultural producer

Sarah Parris – banker

Schemel Patrick – mass communications/ youth affairs

Bernadette Persaud – artist

Annalise Fraser Phang – businesswoman

Laureen Pierre – educator/historian/indigenous peoples

Karen Pilgrim – Veterinarian/Sports Organiser/Administrator

Patricia Plummer – banker

Chelauna Providence – community youth facilitator

Danuta Radzik – Women’s affairs

Vanda Radzik – gender advocate/sustainable development

Colleen Reis – businesswoman

Gail Robinson – insurance executive

Tabitha Sarabo-Headley – youth organiser

Pat Sheeratan-Bisnauth – public health; religion

Josefa Tamayo – artist

Raquel Thomas Caesar – forest ecologist/ gender advocate

Sabanto Tokoroho – social work/indigenous culture

Marilyne Trotz – administrator, conference management, linguist

Sheila Veerasammy – gender educator/ manager/social work

Caitlin Vieira – mental health

Nisa Walker – businesswoman

June Ward – administrator

Wintress White – gender advocate

Josephine Whitehead – lawyer, human rights/women’s activist

Charlene Wilkinson – educator/linguist

Joycelyn Williams – economist