Transcript Document

UNDP RBEC Regional Centre
Engendering the Localizing
Sustainable Development
Projects in Western-Balkan
Countries and CIS
Dono Abdurazakova, Regional Gender Adviser
Bratislava, 12 September 2003
Long-term objective: socially just
and sustainable society by
ensuring:



balanced participation between
men and women;

that gender issues are integrated
into decision-making, implementation,
monitoring and evaluation of localized
Sustainable Development initiatives.
Gender mainstreaming is…
“… the process of assessing the implications for
women and men of any planned action,
including legislation, policies or programmes,
in all areas and at all levels. It is a strategy for
making women’s as well as men’s concerns
and experiences an integral dimension of the
design, implementation, monitoring and
evaluation of policies and programmes in all
political, economic and societal spheres so that
women and men benefit equally and inequality
is not perpetuated. The ultimate goal is to
achieve gender equality.” The Report of the
Economic and Social Council for 1997. United
Nations, 1997.
Gender mainstreaming is…
… a strategy that considers a gender
perspective as an integral part of
activities and decision-making to
identify where specific measures
are needed most, for greater and
long-lasting impact
Gender mainstreaming …
….Is a strategy, not a
goal. The goal is gender
equality
Gender mainstreaming …
1.
2.
3.
No longer viewed as a separate issue
Requires thorough and rigorous
analysis of the situation
Doesn’t mean that gender-specific
intervention are abandoned!
Gender equality
• All human beings are free to
develop their personal abilities and
make choices w/o the limitations
set by gender roles
• Aspirations and needs of women
and men are equally valued and
favoured
ARGUMENTATION:



human rights issue
credibility issue
efficiency issue
pre-condition and pre-requisite for
successful local development strategies
Conceptual framework
& international obligations
1. The Beijing Platform for Action
2. Convention on Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against
Women (CEDAW)
No more ‘why’ but ‘HOW’ to
integrate Gender?
• No ready-made
recipe, but need
for adaptation to
the specific needs
of each policy
area;
• Tips: the earlier
conducted, the
better results at
the end and more
space to introduce
changes
Ensure the Following Steps:

Availability of information and sex
disaggregated data is one of the principal
pre-requisites;
 Expertise in the gender relations and policies
on equality needed;
 Based on the first two steps, move with the
preparation of a check list to ask the right
questions
Step one
Outline the current position of men & women
in the area which this policy proposal will
address:
 Who are beneficiaries? How many women,
men? What data source is used to determine
these figures? Are there differences in
situation of women and men in this
sector/area ( in terms of access to resources,
participation, norms and values, rights, etc)?
Is opinion of women and men is taken into
account from the point of costs, benefits,
acceptance, advantages and utility?
Step Two




What factors lead to women and men being
affected differently in the area being
addressed by this policy proposal?
· Identify the factors which lead to the
differential impact on women and men
·
What are the final costs (both financial and
human) paid by women and men if this policy
is adopted?
What benefits (material or other) the
decision will bring to women and men?
·
What implications will be for everyday life
of certain group(s) of women or men?
Step Three
How can the factors which lead to women or
men being affected differentially be addressed
and changed?
 How can the policy proposal respond to the
factors identified in Step 2?
 What actions are proposed in this regard?
 What are the long lasting effects/impact in
case of failure of the proposed policy?
Tools and Resources developed
at the UNDP RBEC Regional
Centre, Bratislava:
•Gender Mainstreaming in Practice: A
Handbook
•Drafting Gender-Aware Legislation:How to
Promote and Protect Gender Equality in the
Central and Eastern Europe and in the CIS
Available at on-line, at UNDP RBEC Gender
Virtual Gender Library, http://gender.undp.sk
Are there gender issues in the
region?
The suicide rates (up 90%), committed
by men in some parts of the region are
highest in the world;
 High life expectancy gaps;
 High educational level of women
combined with their low representation
at all levels of decision-making

Women’s average monthly income as
percentage of men’s
Albania
87 % ;
B&H
n/a
Bulgaria
n/a
;
Croatia
n/a
Romania
80 %
;
Turkey
n/a
Serbia& Montenegro
79%
Source: UNDP/UNECE Gender statistics website http://www.unece.org
Working population
Country
Year
Albania
B&H N/a
Bulgaria
Croatia
FYROM
Romania
Turkey
S&M
1999 38% 62%
1998
1999
1998
1998
1999
1999
% women
47%
46%
39%
46%
31%
42%
% men
53%
54%
61%
54%
69%
58%
Source: UNDP/UNECE Gender statistics website http://www.unece.org
Seats in parliament
Country
Year
% women
% men
Albania
B&H
Bulgaria
Croatia
FYROM
Romania
Turkey
S&M
2001
2002
2002
2002
2002
2002
2002
2002
6%
17%
26%
21%
18%
11%
4%
7% 93%
94%
83%
74%
79%
82%
89%
96%
Source: Inter-Parliamentary Union, http://www.ipu.org
SUGGESTED ENTRYPOINTS
for LoSD:
(1) sub-regional advocacy workshop :

Suggest gender- balanced representation;
 
Include a separate session for gender
sensitisation and awareness raising on the need
to integrate gender if local development
strategies intend to be successful;
 
Ensure that other sessions do not
perpetuate existing gender inequalities and
traditional distribution of gender roles;
 
Search and bring successful examples of
mainstreamed from gender perspective local
development strategies developed through
participatory methods (gender budgets).

(1) Training for Local Action Groups:
Preparation of Situation Assessment

Ensure that Gender analysis is a part of
overall methodology(s);
 Gender expert is part of the team;
 Questionnaires include gender specific
questions
 Interviews target equally women and men in
balanced manner, to reflect their views
Pilot strategy development for and with
participation of the LAG-s

As strategy will be developed in a
participatory manner, special efforts should
apply to ensure that women and men
represented equally;
 and the environment enables them to
participate and provide meaningful input;
 Not only special elements dedicated to
gender in the strategies, tools for achieving
the strategy, and appropriate action plans, but
overall goal mainstreamed.