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As the G7 summit unfolds in Kananaskis, Alberta this week—fifty years after its founding in the wake of global economic instability—BWSS stands in solidarity with our national feminist counterparts working through the Women7 (W7) engagement group. These advocates are advancing a bold agenda that challenges the G7—not in abstraction, but directly, under Canadian leadership—to deliver concrete action on gender-based violence, economic justice, care infrastructure, climate resilience, digital safety, and feminist foreign policy. Canada’s position as host carries both prestige and responsibility. What we do here will echo globally.

W7’s calls to action are urgent, intersectional, and grounded in the everyday experiences of women, girls, and gender-diverse people across the globe. At BWSS, we recognize that the structural injustices W7 identifies—privatized care, gendered poverty, tech-facilitated violence, extractive economics, and eroding public accountability—are not distant or abstract. They show up in communities across British Columbia. They are visible in housing precarity, court delays, underfunded services, and the climate emergencies that displace women and fracture Indigenous communities. We see these realities every day on the frontlines.

Our campaign, #DesignedWithSurvivors, asks: what would public safety look like if it were built by those who survive violence?

That question is not only local—it is global. Prime Minister Mark Carney’s G7 agenda names economic resilience, democracy and human rights, inclusive growth, climate action, and digital governance as Canada’s priorities. These are necessary priorities. But unless they are grounded in feminist principles, survivor leadership, and systems of accountability, they risk reinforcing the very conditions they claim to address.

Canada’s G7 plan outlines three core missions: protecting communities and the world, accelerating digital and energy transitions, and securing partnerships through private investment. These are ambitious—and in some cases promising—but incomplete. Below, we examine how they intersect with W7’s demands and BWSS’s frontline analysis.

Canada wants to protect communities by strengthening peace and countering crime. But survivors need more than military or policing frameworks.

Public safety must include survivors. Violence against women and gender-diverse people is systemic, predictable, and preventable. It’s time for BC—and Canada—to treat gender-based violence as a public safety emergency, not a secondary concern behind foreign interference or transnational crime. Peace and security must begin at home. A country that fails to protect survivors cannot credibly claim global leadership on human rights.

Canada seeks to accelerate digital transformation and unlock AI and quantum technologies. But survivors are already under attack online.

Tech-facilitated abuse—stalking, harassment, coercive control—is escalating, yet BC’s legal and policing systems haven’t caught up. Survivors need legal protections, police training, and safe digital spaces now. Prime Minister Carney’s focus on digital governance must include digital safety for women and gender-diverse people. Innovation without regulation is not progress—it’s harm.

Canada aims to attract private investment and build infrastructure—but care infrastructure is missing from this vision.

Survivors can’t escape violence if they can’t access care. Childcare, elder care, and mental health supports are essential to safety. In BC, survivors remain trapped in abuse because they lack the structural supports to leave. Care work is infrastructure. If Canada wants to lead the G7 on inclusive growth, it must begin by investing in the care economy that underpins every other form of economic participation.

Canada touts economic resilience—but doesn’t acknowledge gendered poverty.

Poverty is not gender-neutral. Economic abuse traps women in violence. BWSS provides survivor-centred employment, legal advocacy, and trauma support because existing economic systems punish rather than protect. In British Columbia, survivors are navigating income assistance programs that are inadequate by design. If the G7 defines resilience only in terms of markets and productivity, it will continue to exclude those living in precarity.

Canada recognizes the threat of wildfires and climate instability—but ignores how women are disproportionately affected.

Displacement, disaster, and extraction hit women—especially Indigenous women—first and hardest. BWSS supports Indigenous women who are both survivors of violence and defenders of land, community, and sovereignty. Feminist climate justice is not optional—it is central to survival. A climate policy that does not include land-based healing, Indigenous leadership, and gendered impact assessment will fail to protect the most vulnerable.

Canada speaks of global partnerships and shared values—but who defines those values, and who is included?

Intersectional policy requires intersectional accountability. The Prime Minister’s emphasis on inclusive democracy must be matched by provincial and national systems that track outcomes for survivors—particularly those who are Indigenous, Black, racialized, or living with disabilities. BWSS is calling for public audits, survivor-led consultation, and provincial data collection that moves beyond performative gender-based analysis. Commitments mean little without measurable, material change.

We are the infrastructure of public safety—yet our funding is unstable.

To end gender-based violence, BC must provide long-term, core funding for survivor services. Year-to-year grants don’t build safety—they sustain crisis. W7’s call for stable investment in feminist organizations directly challenges the short-termism that defines so much of Canada’s social policy. In BC, anti-violence organizations like ours operate at full capacity while navigating frozen contracts and rising demand. Structural investment—not symbolic gestures—is what’s needed now.

The Women7 agenda makes clear that feminist priorities are not fringe—they are foundational to peace, stability, and economic justice. As Canada hosts the world at the G7, we call on our leaders to lead not only in words, but in deeds. To listen not only to heads of state, but to those who survive violence, exclusion, and economic abandonment. And to act not only for markets and institutions, but for the safety and freedom of people.

#DesignedWithSurvivors is our contribution to a global feminist movement demanding transformation. We are not waiting for change. We are building it—right here, right now.