 Felly, ddych chi'n gwrs eich cyntaf yn cwrwm ymlaen i ddweud wneud, ac y cyfnod o'r cyfarfyn arall o'r cyfrwm maen, os wedi'u cefnod y bydd yn gofynu eich gwrs, a yn cwrwm, mae'n hollwch yn ysgrifetau i gael eu cyfrwm, ond mae'n defnyddio'n gweithio i'r defnyddio i'r defnyddio. We are really talking about women in low pay, and the services that they rely upon. But, also, we're talking about an erosion of services, particularly for minority women, women from the indigenous traveling community in Ireland, who had budgets cut particularly around back to education measures, and others forms, of incentives and social protection that create a cushion in the context of the labour market for such disadvantaged women. Iarish context is interesting. We don't have an explicitly hardwired political party, and we have forms of populism which tend to circulate in cultural terms, we have a political culture that is very much directed by forms of cliantilism, and in many ways forms of right-wing activism can be quite implicit and difficult to target for feminist actors. Mae gennym o'r rhaglen yn roi lleolfyn yn ymdegol o'r rhaglen yw'r rhaglen yn ymdegol. Yn dwy'r rhaglen, mae'n dwy'r rhaglen yn rhaid i ddweud yn ffynol gwaith yn y ffynol gwaith ond rymdyn nhw'n dwylo cyflwyno'r hwnnw. Mae'r hwnnw'n dweud yw'n dweud yn dweud yn dweud i ddweud yn y ddweud ychydigol yn rhaid i ddweud ychydigol gyda'r rhaglen yn gweithgau. We, in the study that we conducted on the Irish case and actually looking comparatively across Europe at other efforts by feminist organisations to deal with permanent austerity. We come to the inclusion really that there is general lack of capacity in feminist political economic analysis, and we find this is really a function in some ways of the erosion of the gender equality infrastructure. Felly, mae'r ddef 2008 o gyfnod, roedd y gyrsas, ac y dweudio'r ddef, roedd rhan o'r cyfnod yma. Rwy'r cyffredig ei gwmpasiau yn ymgyrch chi oes ei dweudio'r dweudio yma, yn cofnod o'i adres yn f peasio ac yn gwneud y gwirionedd yma, sut mae'r brunio cyfan yn ei gael yw ar fragmentol iawn yma. Well, again, looking at the Irish country case, for us really we think there are some very interesting possibilities around generating alliances, particularly between trade unions, leftist trade unions and feminist organisations. And this is a problem, we really have a kind of an absence of feminist critical actors within trade unions. And when they are there, they don't seem to be very well supported. Often we find that feminist organisations are raising distributional issues, but they are in many ways marginalised in debates, because it's quite difficult to construct solidarity across leftist political formations in the Irish context. So really a possibility would be, whether it's in the context of maybe pension policy or low pay or precarious work, to think about constructing alliances with trade unions, particularly those representing feminised, feminised occupations. I think that would be a really fruitful way forward. So in the Irish context we've always been quite reliant on international forum, particularly the EU and the UN to try and raise issues, particularly around reproductive rights and other issues to do with institutional abuse in the Irish context of women and children. So we're quite used to thinking about the international context as an important believer for change on gender equality issues. We do see that even perhaps maybe international confederation of trade unions, the ETUC, there could be probably interesting possibilities there to raise issues, perhaps the European Parliament also in the FEM committee, and to think about not just talking to each other, because Irish feminists already talked other European feminists, but it's moving outside of that circle and thinking about other left political formations operating across Europe. There could be a space for then some kind of generative form of alliance, particularly to raise issues, particularly for the most disadvantaged women, distributional issues, not just issues related to legality or using other forum at the UN, but actually more fundamental issues around social protection and around social investment, particularly in terms of labour market policy and social welfare.