the eu women's lobby

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 The European Women's Lobby Author(s): Catherine Hoskyns Source: Feminist Review , No. 38 (Summer, 1991), pp. 67-70 Published by: Palgrave Macmillan Journals Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1395378 Accessed: 11-05-2016 17:41 UTC  Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at http://about.jstor.org/terms  JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Palgrave Macmillan Journals is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Feminist Review This content downloaded from 193.226.52.248 on Wed, 11 May 2016 17:41:19 UTC All use subject to http://about .jstor.org/terms

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Page 1: The EU Women's Lobby

8/16/2019 The EU Women's Lobby

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 The European Women's LobbyAuthor(s): Catherine HoskynsSource: Feminist Review , No. 38 (Summer, 1991), pp. 67-70Published by: Palgrave Macmillan JournalsStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1395378Accessed: 11-05-2016 17:41 UTC

 

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at

http://about.jstor.org/terms

 

JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted

digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about

JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

Palgrave Macmillan Journals is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to

Feminist Review 

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 THE EUROPEAN WOMEN S LOBBY

 Catherine Hoskyns

 The European Women s Lobby was formally set up at a meeting in

 Brussels on 21-22 September 1990. The aim of the Lobby is to establish

 a permanent representation for women at the level of the European

 Community (EC). Women are represented in the Lobby via delegates

 from nongovernmental women s organizations, or co-ordinations of

 women s organizations, which are operating at either the European or

 the national level. The existence of the Lobby, the form it takes and its

 potential for action, raises crucial questions about the involvement of

 women in mainstream political activity and the ways in which women s

 diverse interests can be represented.

 The idea of a European Women s Lobby was first mooted in the

 early 1980s, with the already existing EC Youth Forum being cited as an

 example. Initial soundings foundered on the hostility and/or distance

 between traditional and feminist women in most countries, and on the

 lack of interest of the latter in either the EC or mainstream politics.1

 During the 1980s, however, both the hostility and the distance

 lessened, with traditional women s organizations becoming somewhat

 more radical, and more feminists seeing the need to enter the

 mainstream . Indicative of this latter trend was the growth of the

 European Network of Women which tried to make links between

 grassroots women s organizations and to campaign at the European

 level.

 As a result of these two developments the issue of the Lobby was

 raised again at a seminar for women s organizations in the EC held in

 London in November 1987. At that meeting, where traditional women

 outnumbered feminist women by perhaps two to one, a unanimous

 decision was taken to set up the Lobby, and seek funds from the

 European Commission (subsequently granted) for preparatory work. To

 carry this out a group of forty women was chosen, mainly, it would seem,

 by the two women s bureaux in the European Commission, and by those

  in the know at the London seminar. The emphasis on organized

Feminist Review No 38, Summer 1991

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 68 Feminist Review

 women did not exclude feminist groups or networks which had some

 structure (and this varied a great deal between one country and

 another) but it did very clearly exclude any direct representation of poor

 women or of black and ethnic minority women who are not organized in

 that way. The UK representatives on the group of forty came from the

 Fawcett Society, the Women s National Commission, and the Women s

 Organizations Interest Group (WOIG) of the National Council for

 Voluntary Organizations (NCVO).

 Over the next two years, the basic structure and ethos of the Lobby

 was developed. Europe-wide women s organizations with a commitment

 to equality would have the right to direct representation on the General

 Assembly. National women s organizations or co-ordinations of organiz-

 ations in each country would have the right to four delegates each. The

 aim of the Lobby was to represent women including the least privileged

 and least organized and to promote their interests at the level of the EC.

 Its function was not only to lobby, but to exchange information and

 develop transnational campaigns. The General Assembly would elect a

 bureau of twenty which would act as the steering committee for the

 Lobby and appoint the secretariat.

 The extent to which there was publicity about or consultation on

 these provisions depended very much upon the capacities, resources

 and inclinations of the country members on the group of forty, and the

 organizations they represented. In the UK, the need to develop a policy

 on and a suitable structure for the Lobby, coincided with the desire of

 WOIG to break away from the NCVO and establish a separate

 federation of women s organizations. The establishment of the National

 Alliance of Women s Organizations (NAWO), and the big increase in

 membership which followed, facilitated a wide-ranging debate on the

 shape of the Lobby and UK participation in it.

 In true Community style (though this may be changed in the future)

 the Lobby s provisional statutes gave little guidance as to how the

 national delegates should be chosen. In the UK, the decision was made

 to elect them on a regional basis, with one delegate each from Scotland,

 Northern Ireland, Wales and England. The Dutch, by contrast, allo-

 cated their delegates to interest groups: one to the feminist network, one

 to traditional women s organizations, one to ethnic minority women,

 and one to women s health groups. Other countries were less egali-

 tarian. In Germany, for example, the Deutsche Frauenrat, the big

 traditional women s council, allocated all the delegates to its member

 organizations. A committee has now been set up by the Lobby which will

 deal with complaints about or requests for representation.

 More than seventy women came to the inaugural meeting in

 September 1990. The vast majority were white, professional and middle

 aged, but with diverse backgrounds, skills and politics. Trade-union

 women were present but not numerous. Only two out of the seventy

 were ethnic-minority women: one was elected to the bureau. The

 atmosphere at the meeting seems to have been constructive. As one

 delegate put it: people were mature, they tried to contribute to the

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 European Women 69

 common purpose and not to make awkward points for the sake of it . The

 main work of the meeting was to go through and adopt the statutes, elect

 the bureau, and establish working methods which were acceptable to

 women used to widely different styles of political activity.

 A draft programme of work for the Lobby was presented to the

 meeting but only discussed in very general terms. Much of the work

 envisaged centres on the Community s Third Action Programme for

 Equal Opportunities due to be adopted during 1991.2 The draft for this

 Action Programme has been watered down and effective lobbying will be

 needed if it is to retain a cutting edge. The Lobby s proposed programme

 also includes, among other items, research and action on aspects of

 women s poverty in the EC and on the effects on black, migrant and

 ethnic-minority women of the increasing co-ordination of immigration

 procedures in the EC member states. One of the first priorities of the

 Lobby s bureau, however, will have to be to ensure adequate funding for

 the first year, initially at least from Community institutions.

 Beneath all this activity run two subtexts. The first is: can the

 Lobby become sufficiently expert and competent, and well-enough

 resourced, to have a real impact in the Brussels jungle? The second is:

 can the Lobby be sufficiently broad-based, democratic and accountable

 (and well-enough resourced) to justify its claims to represent women

 across the EC? To some these requirements are contradictory, with

 democracy being seen as the enemy of competence, and vice versa. In

 theory, it should be possible to achieve both, if competence is respected,

 but firmly harnessed to the service of the broader membership, if a wide

 range of skills and orientations are recognized as valuable, and if the

 Lobby sees it as its function not only to operate in Brussels but to make

 the Brussels arena accessible to a more diverse range of women. In

 practice, especially if resources are limited, the balance may be hard to

 achieve.

 Interestingly, this kind of transnational politics at the European

 level is so new that there is little good practice upon which the Lobby can

 draw. Lobbying in Brussels is for the most part an elitist affair with

 lobbyists seeking autonomy rather than accountability. But trans-

 national politics of a genuinely popular kind is desperately needed if the

 hold of techno-bureaucrats and business elites is to be challenged in

 Brussels. It is evidence of the current force of European politics, that

 women are seeking to establish participatory and effective trans-

 national mechanisms, at a time when similar structures for women at

 the national level hardly exist.

 Notes

 Catherine Hoskyns is senior lecturer in international relations at Coventry

 Polytechnic. She is doing research on the implications of the European

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 70 Feminist Review

 Community s policy on women s rights and the way women are organizing in

 Europe. She is active in the European Forum of Socialist Feminists.

 1 I am using the terms traditional and feminist here as a shorthand for

 distinguishing between those women s organizations which essentially work

 within the existing system, and those which seek to change it. Obviously,

 there are huge variations within these two categories - and some overlap

 between them.

 2 Since 1980 the European Community s policy on women s rights has been

 developed through Action Programmes. These ensure a budget line and give

 the civil servants working on women s issues within the European Com-

 mission a framework within which to act. The scope and emphasis of the

 Programmes is thus extremely important in shaping future developments.

 Contacts for the Lobby

 Brussels Co-ordinator: Jacqueline de Groote, la Place Quetelet, 1030 Brussels.

 Tel: 010 322 217 9020.

 UK Liaison: Jane Grant, National Alliance of Women s Organisations (NAWO),

 279/281 Whitechapel Road, London El 1BY. Tel: 071 247 7052.

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