Behind the scenes of LGBTQI+ Advocacy: A mental health conversation with Valentina Parra Oct 21, 2024 | Read more
Canadian coalition calls for urgent action to uphold civil liberties and Charter rights at protests and encampments across the country May 15, 2024 | Read more
Inter Pares joins call for Burma to end use of violence and respect democracy Feb 4, 2021 | Read more
Inter Pares welcomes Canada’s feminist realignment of international assistance Jun 9, 2017 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Stopping the unstoppable: Citizen resistance to exterminator technology in Burkina Faso Sep 4, 2019 | Read more
Behind the scenes of LGBTQI+ Advocacy: A mental health conversation with Valentina Parra Oct 21, 2024 | Read more
The Immigrant Workers Centre to receive 2018 Peter Gillespie Social Justice Award Apr 18, 2018 | Read more
“Until We Find Them”: Searching for missing loved ones on the road to the North Mar 11, 2019 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS | Inter Pares and SUWRA launch Canadian civil society working group on Sudan Jun 25, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Round Table with Vigilance OGM: Agroecology, feminist approaches and the struggle against agrochemicals Oct 7, 2024 | Read more
Behind the scenes of LGBTQI+ Advocacy: A mental health conversation with Valentina Parra Oct 21, 2024 | Read more
Advocacy is resistance: Navigating anti-LGBTQI+ violence in post-war Guatemala May 23, 2024 | Read more
Inter Pares Annual Report 2015 - Civil society: Holding governments to account resources : Annual Reports Share Print Civil society: Holding governments to account Periodically, we suddenly feel that we’re in a ‘watershed’ moment. We are surprised that seemingly out of nowhere, the world is awakening to a new day. But watershed moments aren’t built in a day. Nor do they always bring lasting transformation. Tracing these moments' roots usually takes you back through years of difficult struggle, often frustrating or thankless, led by committed individuals and groups. Historically, the most effective protection against dictatorship has always been a strong and vibrant civil society – holding governments accountable, creating and maintaining public awareness, supporting people to claim their rights. This work enables strategic steps toward that watershed moment, while building preparedness so that people have the plans, positions, and policies to jump into the breach and negotiate a better future. A watershed moment may be a great achievement, but is not an end in itself. It is a transitory opening when a different future becomes possible – but this opening may evaporate, or be hijacked by parties with other interests. From the French Revolution to the Arab Spring, people have been left wondering after victories how everything then went off the rails. A recently celebrated ‘watershed’ in 2011 saw Burma take its first tentative steps away from a military dictatorship. In response, sanctions were abruptly dropped, investment poured in, mass abuses and human rights benchmarks were suddenly forgotten. When Burma’s activists and civil society called for caution and continued pressure from foreign governments, outside ‘experts’ declared that criticism would undermine progress. Five years later, the world struggles to understand why Rohingya Muslims are still fleeing violence, why armed conflict still continues, and how the military still wields power despite democratic elections. But civil society in ethnic conflict zones continues to work under the radar, successfully exploiting very limited openings to get civilian concerns into peace negotiations, to gain government recognition of community-based health initiatives, and to advance proposals that would make Burma’s fledgling democracy more inclusive. These are among the efforts Inter Pares supports, and in 2015 we convinced the Canadian government to fund this difficult but exciting work for the next five years. We’re also working on other transformations. For instance, in Canada, counterparts like Food Secure Canada are finally beginning to see years of research and advocacy reflected in government policies. In the Philippines, it has been over three years since the ‘watershed’ signing of a comprehensive reproductive health law, but our counterpart Likhaan is still working hard to secure its implementation and help impoverished women access its provisions. Over a decade of advocacy by counterparts in Peru has finally led to cases against military personnel for crimes against humanity, and the government has accepted accountability for forced sterilizations of Indigenous women in the 1990s. Whether in Burma, Canada, Peru, or elsewhere, watersheds are opportunities that require renewed efforts, solidarity, and support. These are opportunities we cannot afford to miss. Inside this Annual Report, you’ll find examples of Inter Pares' work with counterparts worldwide building toward moments of opportunity, negotiating through them, and most importantly, making them yield lasting results. Some of these moments are occurring right now; some have transpired, and some are on their way. Together, we can make them happen – and we can make the change stick. Download (pdf 2.69 MB)