Recognising Unpaid Female Care Labour
This article was originally published on The Morning and written by Nelie Munasinghe Sri Lanka’s economy continues to rely heavily
This article was originally published on The Morning and written by Nelie Munasinghe Sri Lanka’s economy continues to rely heavily
The Invisible Work of Resilience: A Pilot Study Exploring the Intersection Between Women’s Unpaid Care Work & Climate Change in
Meeting on Gender-Sensitive Disaster Response and Recovery Mechanisms Cyclone Ditwah and the response in its aftermath exposed persistent gender gaps in disaster response
For as long as she has held public office, Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya has been subject to misogynistic attacks and
Sri Lanka is experiencing the catastrophic ripple effects of an unmitigated climate emergency. Cyclone Ditwah made landfall on the 28th
Introduction The Rebuilding Sri Lanka Fund, created after Cyclone Ditwah, has been announced without a single woman among its members.
In Sri Lanka, unpaid care work is overwhelmingly performed by women and remains largely excluded from national accounting systems (DCS,
Youth Discussion: “Legal Limitations and Access to Justice – From a Feminist Perspective” A focused discussion session with Professor Deepika
In a significant development for gender equality and climate justice in Sri Lanka, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
Enabling recognition of unpaid care work in Sri Lanka “Care work is the backbone of our society and economy, yet