2016 was the year that everyday Australian women wielded real power online.
Women helped deliver eight of the ten biggest social change victories of 2016 on Change.org, up from five out of ten last year.
A victory is counted by the change platform, when an identified ‘decision maker’ grants the ask of a petitioner, resulting in a tangible change.
This year, by sharing their stories online and encouraging others to take action, female petitioners decriminalised medicinal cannabis, influenced supermarket giants, won half a billion dollars in relief for dairy farmers and saved 26 lives by cutting the waiting list for a life-saving cancer operation.
“In 2016, everyday Australians proved that their personal stories can change the world,โ Change.org head Nathan Elvery said.
โOnline petitions have become even more influential this year: the Deputy PM, Assistant Treasurer, Health Minister and Leader of the Opposition all directly engaged with petition starters and granted their asks.”
Two 16 year-old Victorian girls created landmark changes.
Angelina persuaded Aldi to abolish caged eggs while Chloe demanded a relief package for dairy farmers like her Dad and a review of the milk pricing system.
Chloe’s petition resulted in a phone call from the Deputy PM, Barnaby Joyce, which she took in between classes. In an official response to her petition, Joyce announced his policy $1 billion in relief for dairy farmers and $2 million to review milk pricing.
When Lucy Haslam, a former nurse, first shared her story on Change.org, she was a criminal for ‘dealing’ medicinal cannabis to her terminally ill son.
Her petition to decriminalise medicinal cannabis in February this year, gained more than 250,000 signatures.
Itโs the second biggest win in Change.org Australiaโs history with 251,000 on their petition and official responses from all major parties. The law changed, poignantly, in the first anniversary of her sonโs death.
Galy O’Connor, a [New South Wales] mother of six, successfully petitioned Mike Baird – her local member – to cut the waiting list for an operation on the abdominal cancer that would’ve killed her had he not acted urgently.
She’ll be operated on later this month and another 25 Australians have had their lives saved as a result.
Carolyn Priest successfully persuaded the Department of Public Prosecutions [DPP] to charge and prosecute two men suspected of killing Aboriginal woman Lynette Daley who was left to die on a NSW beach in 2011.
The two prime suspects had escaped prosecution and Priest’s petition asking the DPP to look at the case gained almost 70,000 signatures.
There were seven major victories for womenโs equality on Change.or this year โ more than any other cause, except health, on the platform.
Petitions were successfully used by both women and men to block this visas of “misogynist hate preachers” Roosh V and Julien Blanc.
Laura successfully petitioned Facebook to remove ‘Hotties of Melbourne Uni’ which ranked women according to their perceived attractiveness without their consent, and told users where to find them and when.
It is estimated that one in every six Australians have now either signed or started a petition online. While men are 38%ย moreย likelyย to start a petition on Change, womenย are 14%ย moreย likelyย to be victorious.
It is a heartening dynamic. Women still donโt wield as much โpowerโ in the traditional sense as men: in simplistic terms we donโt have as many seats at the table.
But the result of 4.3million users banding together online in 2016 is proof that women can rally together to create change. Hereโs to more of the same in 2017.
What Australians cared most about in 2016
Of all the petitions on Change.org that reached over 10,000 signatures, these were the top themes that emerged:
- Health โ 351,636 signatures resulted in two major victories
- Women โ 257, 683 signatures resulted in seven major victories
- Crime and justice โ 214,291 signatures resulted in three major victories
- Farming – 161,495 signatures resulted in one major victory
- Animals – 96,799 signatures resulted in one major victory
Georgina Dent is a contributing editor atย Womenโs Agenda. She began her working lifeย as a lawyerย before building a career in journalismย asย an editor, reporterย and recognisedย advocate for women.
This article was originally published on Womenโs Agenda.ย
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