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Overseas Women Protection Project

  • Duration
    Ten years
  • Location
    Belgium, France and other countries
  • Project Details
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Project Introduction

The Overseas Women Protection Project, launched by the SRP, is a long-term volunteer project that has vulnerable overseas Chinese women as its main target of assistance. The project takes the problem of domestic violence as its main focus, and it strives to create a global aid network with Belgium as its starting point, to help victims protect their rights and extricate themselves from the predicament. Through the collection and compilation of information and resources, and on the basis of long-term cooperation with a variety of organizations, bodies and expert consultant, the project will provide linguistic, psychological, medical and legal support through various national outlets and establish a safe and convenient online platform where requests for help can be matched.

This project is dedicated to improving the lives of the women in the target group, while stressing their self-empowerment, and realizing a virtuous cycle of mutual support through the community. The project’s pilot scheme started in July 2020 in Belgium, and it is forecasted to cover the 30 countries with most overseas Chinese in the world within two years. By August 2020 the project had 125 participating volunteers, and it had calculated the number of overseas Chinese in different countries, estimated the potential number of help-seekers, and it had set up legal support, medical support, and women’s aid organizations, information on overseas Chinese circles, a databank on asylum networks. It has already provided help to 23 women coming from countries including Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, France and the Netherlands.

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Project Key Facts
  • Organization
    Social Responsibility Practitioners
  • Location
    Belgium, France and other countries
  • Duration
    Ten years
  • Employees
    155
  • Local Partners
    Charity Organization
Organization

Social Responsibility Practitioners

Contact Details

WeChat public account:社会责任家
Zhihu:社会责任家SRP
Weibo:社会责任家SRP

Instagram:srp_international

Facebook: @srpinternational

Linkedin:社会责任家Social Responsibility Practitioners

website: www.srpinternational.org

email: srpteam@163.com

Country
  • Belgium
Sector
  • Gender Equality
United Nations SDG
  • 05: Gender Equality
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Voices of Chinese Overseas (VOCO)

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Since China House’s foundation, it has conducted extensive research on Chinese people living abroad. Researchers investigated their lives and work profoundly, to understand all aspects of their life, and realistically documented their condition through articles and videos. This information is then spread to help the world gain an objective understanding.

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• In Ethiopia, China House investigates the corporate social responsibility of Chinese factories and the real conditions in Chinese communities. China House initiated the “Voice of Chinese Overseas” (VOCO) project, and organized students to create the related website (vocochina.org).

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In 2005, Marinduque Province came in third place in a ranking of the regions of the Philippines with the scarcest forest resources made by the Department of Environmental and Natural Resources of the Philippines. In order to tackle deforestation, Marinduque Province started programs of tree planting and a highland development project to implement the National Green Plan and the Community Forest Management Act. In the National Green Plan, the local government approved the rent of 369 acres of land to the United Marinduquenians Inc. (UMI), a local company, in the use of forest recovery. Part of the land will also be used to plant cash crops.

The SPR Philippines Program aims at collaborating with UMI to carry out forest recovery projects, encourage the planting and processing of cash crops and develop the tourist economy. In the meanwhile, by creating new industrial sectors, the SPR Philippines Program will create new job opportunities to benefit and empower the local residents, promote the local sustainable development goals and achieve multi-agent themed networks between China and the Philippines.

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Protecting the local environment and ecosystem through planting trees – planting cash crops (mainly cocoa trees) and trees, improving the local living standards – creating employment opportunities through activities such as crop farming and tourist farms and increasing the local income – imparting professional agricultural technologies, improving professional technical skills.
Establishing China-Philippines multi-agent themed networks – including themes such as NGOs in China and the Philippines, the environment for companies, governments and higher education institutions, business and trade, overseas Chinese women (this topic will lay a good foundation for SRP’s protection on overseas Chinese women’s rights programs and other women’s rights-related programs).

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In many places in Africa, wildlife poachers will braid steel cables into snare traps and hide them in the forests, in the meadows, on the treetops (targeting giraffes) or directly spin the steel cables around the trees. When wild animals pass by, some of them may step into these snare traps. They will then get agitated and want to escape, but the harder they try and the more tightly the steel cables will lock them in and eventually cause injuries. These animals are very likely to end up dying due to infections. It is estimated that in Kenya each year there are almost 100 lions dying because of the snare traps, while other animals such as zebras, antelopes, African buffalos and giraffes are also targeted by these traps.

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Since 2014, China House has collaborated with ANAW to recruit volunteers on a rolling basis. Volunteers go to wildlife habitats near Nairobi, searching for these braided-steel cable traps placed by poachers and removing them, as well as rescuing wild animals harmed by the traps. Each time the searching lasts for a day, and within one day, volunteers are able to remove more than 100 steel traps.

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