What happens when the people most excluded from power lead anyway? From remote villages to the world’s largest stages, women, girls, and gender diverse people are not waiting for permission to shape the future—they are designing it, strategically, boldly, and together. “SISTERHOOD” highlights everyday leaders who transform exclusion into innovation and solidarity into lasting change.
Across the globe, women are often shut out of decision-making, especially where strategic foresight is needed. Yet they lead urgent responses to climate crisis, inequality, health access, and cultural survival. In Australia, First Nations women bear both the burden of intergenerational trauma and the deep governance knowledge of their peoples, offering vital strategies for inclusive, equitable change rarely seen in public policy.
Spanning six continents, “SISTERHOOD” explores communities confronting today’s most crucial problems. Through intimate stories of resilience and solidarity, they deliver an urgent call for transformative, sustainable change.
Our Australian story centers on June Oscar AO, the first Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander woman to serve as Social Justice Commissioner. Leading Wiyi Yani U Thangani (“Women’s Voices”), she brings 900+ First Nations women into spaces long denied them—blending cultural knowledge with modern governance for enduring solutions. In May 2026, their work will take the global stage at Women Deliver, the world’s largest gender equality conference, hosted for the first time in Melbourne. Here, Wiyi Yani U Thangani will present Indigenous-led strategies to be woven into the global change agenda. This meeting of local strength and global spotlight marks a turning point, as voices long excluded from decision-making claim the center of urgent conversations—and reshape the future.
“SISTERHOOD” features stories from each continent, plus a global story. For more information about the other 6 stories visit our website: www.sisterhoodmovie.com