Fulata Lusungu Mbano Moyo is a Malawian systematic and feminist theologian who is an advocate for gender justice.
[2] Moyo completed a master's degree in Christian thought, systematic and feminist theology from the University of Zimbabwe in 1993.
[8] She encouraged churches to adopt the "Thursdays in Black" campaign against rape and violence, which was inspired by the Mothers of the Disappeared in Argentina who protested at the Plaza de Mayo on Thursdays, Women in Black in Israel and the women in Rwanda, DRC and Bosnia who were already articulating their experience of rape as a weapon of war.
[2] In 2018, she was appointed to an independent expert panel to review UNAIDS policies and processes for addressing and preventing harassment.
[9] In 2020, Moyo founded "Stream", a US registered NGO that supports and mentors survivors of sex trafficking, which in 2021 was registered in Malawi as Thimlela-STREAM to focus of prevention, protection and mitigation of human trafficking that focusses of the survivors starting with Chindindi and Ndonda communities in Mzimba District, northern Malawi.
[6] Moyo is a member of the Circle of Concerned African Women Theologians, first participating in Nairobi and then restarting the Malawi chapter.
As a member of faculty at University of Malawi, she served as the Secretary of the Board of Diploma in Theological Studies in 1996, and a Deputy Director of the Center of [1] She was General Coordinator from 2007 to 2013.
[13] Desmond Tutu, Humour and Social Justice, Sarojini Nadar, Tinyiko Maluleke, Dietrich Werner, Vicentia Kgabe & Rudolf Heinz (Eds), Ecumenical Encounters with Desmond Tutu: Visions for Justice, Dignity and Peace, Regnum Books/UWC Press, 2022, (p139-143) Lockdown and Sexual Exploitation, Chammah J. Kaunda (Ed.