Welcome to AZNOW!

My name is Sheila Ogea.  As Arizona NOW's Policy Spokesperson, I am happy to welcome you to our website. Here you'll find information about who AZ NOW is, who NOW is, our blog/news posts, upcoming events, our AZ NOW PAC endorsement process and candidate endorsements, how to join, and much more. If you need more information about us, please feel free to email me at PolicySpokesperson@aznow.org. We're here for you!

Who are we?

The Arizona National Organization for Women (AZNOW) works to advance the equal status of women and girls in all aspects of their lives. We use a variety of strategies and tactics to achieve our goal. Through our legislative, educational, and political work, we work to create change in many different ways, on many different levels. Our state coordinators focus on specific issues; learn more here.
We are the parent chapter for the Arizona NOW chapters, but each Arizona NOW chapter functions as its own entity. AZNOW shares action alerts, information, and events and meetings on the here on our website and on our Facebook page and calendar page, Our goal is to help inform and activate our Arizona NOW chapters and the general public to our work. We also hold a state conference each year.

Our priority issues

These issues are core to NOW and core to Arizona NOW.
Ending Violence Against Women: NOW is unique in its approach to the issue of StopViolenceAgainstWomenviolence against women, emphasizing that there are many interrelated aspects to the issue—domestic violence; sexual assault; sexual harassment; violence at abortion clinics; hate crimes across lines of gender, sexuality and race; the gender bias in our judicial system that further victimizes survivors of violence; and the violence of poverty emphasized by the radical right’s attacks on poor women and children—all of which result from society’s attitudes toward women and efforts to “keep women in their place.”
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Racial Justice: NOW condemns the racism that inflicts a double burden of race and sex discrimination on women of color. Seeing human rights as indivisible, we are committed to identifying and fighting against those barriers to equality and justice that are imposed by racism. A leader in the struggle for civil rights since its inception in 1966, NOW is committed to diversifying our movement, and we continue to fight for equal opportunities for women of color in all areas including employment, education and reproductive rights.
Reproductive Rights and Justice: NOW affirms that reproductive rights are issues of life and death for women, not mere matters of choice. NOW fully supports access to safe and legal abortion, to effective birth control and emergency contraception, to reproductive health services and education for all women. We oppose attempts to restrict these rights through legislation, regulation or Constitutional amendment.
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Economic Justice: NOW advocates for wide range of economic justice issues affecting women, from the glass ceiling to the sticky floor of poverty. These include welfare reform, livable wages, job discrimination, pay equity, housing, social security and pension reform, and much more.
Equal Marriage
LGBT Rights: NOW is committed to fighting discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity in all areas, including employment, housing, public accommodations, health services, child custody and military policies. NOW is committed to educational efforts that combat the adverse effects of homophobia, promote positive images in the media and ultimately ensure civil rights protection for all. NOW asserts the right of lesbians to live their lives with dignity and security, and marriage equality for all.
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Constitutional Equality Amendment: Equality in pay, job opportunities, political structure, social security and education will remain an elusive dream without a guarantee of equality in the U.S. Constitution. The progress we have made—and must continue to make—towards women’s equality can be lost at any time because those advances depend on legislation that can be (and has been) weakened or repealed by Congress. Although we did not succeed in ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment, winning a constitutional guarantee of equality for women remains one of NOW’s top priorities.

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