Articles in Category: Women Worldwide

Fighting for Girls' Rights

By Susan Macaulay

betty_makoni.jpgBetty Makoni was beaten and raped as a child. When she was nine, she saw her father kill her mother.

But she is not a victim. She is a survivor, activist and leader who turned her devastating childhood experiences into a force for good in her native country Zimbabwe.

In 1998, Makoni founded Girl Child Network (GCN) , a Zimbabwean girls’ rights organization that now has approximately 30,000 members across the country.

She received the World’s Children’s Prize for the Rights of Children in 2007, and Amnesty International’s Ginetta Sagan Award for Women’s and Children’s Rights in 2008.

Volunteer Midwife Helps Women In Sierra Leone

zoe-vowles.jpgZoe Vowles, a British midwife working in remote Sierra Leone, has just been shortlisted for Cosmopolitan's Ultimate Women of the Year awards.

The night Zoe Vowles cradled a dying woman in her arms is not one she will easily forget. The Somerset-born midwife, who had spent the past 10 years working with the NHS in Peckham, London, watched helplessly as her patient slipped away in a hospital in one of the remotest corners of Sierra Leone.

“By the time I found her, collapsed on the steps outside, there was little I could do,” says Zoe, 32.

Breast Cancer Triumph: Lisa Norman's Story

By Lisa Norman

picture2.jpgSusan notes (October 16, 2010): I've just made my annual Breast Cancer Awareness Month visit to Lisa Norman's blog to find that she is still cancer free after two and half years. She's finished with Tamoxifen and is onto a three-year course of Anasrozole, she's had more reconstructive surgery and posted some amazing photographs of the resulting bruises. Brava Lisa!

Susan notes (October 18, 2009): Lisa Norman's story was one of the first to be posted on AWR after I launched the site in August 2008. Over the last year, we've rarely been in touch - both of us no doubt busy fulfilling our respective life purposes...

When I clicked on Lisa's blog link today, iit had been many months since I had visited "Lisa's Breast Cancer Journey." I was overjoyed to find that Lisa's hair has grown back, her smile shines brighter than ever and she continues to fight.

Thanks Lisa, for continuing to be an inspiration to the women in your circle, your community, and around the world. No doubt about it, you ROCK!


Last year, at this time, I had NO IDEA that I had bilateral breast cancer.

On a dare from my sister, I decided to have my first mammogram at age 41. I was slated for an October appointment, but a pressing matter in my quest for my Masters degree arose, and I chose to rebook.

The next available opening was in December - so I booked it.

US Activist Layli Miller-Muro Defends Immigrant Women

layli-miller-muro.jpg
Layli Miller-Muro wasn't even out of law school before she helped litigate a case that revolutionized asylum law in the United States.

The case involved Fauziya Kassindja, a 17-year-old girl who fled the West African country of Togo to avoid a tribal practice known as female genital mutilation.

Miller-Muro sought asylum for Kassindja on the grounds that, if her client were to return to Africa, she would almost certainly be subjected to the painful and medically dangerous circumcision.