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It's time to tell our story.

ABOUT THE MOVEMENT

AAPI Women Lead and  #ImReady Movement aims to strengthen the progressive political and social platforms of Asian and Pacific Islander communities in the US through the leadership of self-identified AAPI women and girls.  Our goal is to challenge and help end the intersections of violence against and within our communities. We do this work in solidarity with other communities of color. 

 

The #ImReady Movement raises visibility around self-identified AAPI women and our experiences with #MeToo, racial discrimination, war, immigration, and more. It also celebrates the leadership and power of AAPI women in Education, Business, Technology, and Politics. At the conferences, we bring together AAPI women leaders and our supporters to learn from one another, tell our stories, and to highlight our diverse leadership stories. 

 

We invite you to join us to better understand the complex Asian and Pacific Islander diasporas, histories, and experiences. We invite you to come honor the stories and leadership of our communities. 

 

We are bringing together some of the most brilliant people to explore what it means to be a self-identified AAPI woman in the United States. We know you are one of them. 

 

> Join us. 

About The Movement

BUILDING A MOVEMENT WITH

AAPI WOMEN LEAD

The #ImReady Movement begins with a series of conferences that will raise awareness around the experiences that AAPI women have with #MeToo, gender and racial discrimination. Our families and communities are experiencing issues of domestic violence, sexual violence, child abuse, sex trafficking, human trafficking, and domestic worker abuse. It is time to act.

Our voices have been here and need to be heard now.

We want the public to know that #WeAreHere

AAPI Data

60%

Studies suggest 60% of AAPI women and girls have experienced some form of sexual or domestic abuse.

INCOME INEQUALITY IS REAL

85¢

AAPI women on average earn 85 cents to every dollar that white men earn.

55¢

Hmong and Cambodian women only earn 55 cents for every dollar earned by white men.

44¢

Burmese women earn only 44 cents compared to their white male counterparts. 

DISPARITY IS REAL

HEALTH

The Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander population (NHOPI) has some of the highest rates of smoking, drinking, and obesity. The age-adjusted percentage of heart disease among NHOPI persons aged 18 years and over was 12.5%, with 6.8% for Asians and 10.9% for Whites.

EDUCATION

Only 37.3% of Native Hawaiians alone or in any combination in the United States earned a high school diploma while just 18.2% earned a bachelor’s degree or higher.​

POVERTY

17.6% of the NHOPI community lived below poverty, compared to a national poverty rate of 11.7% for Asians and 11.6% for Whites.

It's time to tell our story.

> Use the hashtag #ImReady on social media

Community Partners

COMMUNITY PARTNERS : 

ENDORSED BY :

National Organization of Asians and
Pacific Islanders Ending Sexual Violence
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