United Nations Economic Commission for Africa African Centre for Statistics Towards a More Effective Production of Gender Sensitive Data in African Countries: Ongoing and Planned Activities.
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Transcript United Nations Economic Commission for Africa African Centre for Statistics Towards a More Effective Production of Gender Sensitive Data in African Countries: Ongoing and Planned Activities.
United Nations Economic Commission for Africa
African Centre for
Statistics
Towards a More Effective
Production of Gender Sensitive
Data in African Countries: Ongoing
and Planned Activities by the
UNECA
Forum on Gender Statistics
10–12 December 2007, Roma, Italy
Dimitri Sanga, Ph.D.
Senior Statistician
Outline
Background
Countries’ Development Agendas
Why are Gender Statistics Critical?
Gender Statistics Challenges in Africa
ECA’s
Response to Gender Statistics
Challenges
The Way Forward
Conclusions
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Background
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Countries’ Development Agendas
National, regional, and international initiatives
aimed at promoting economic and social
development in African countries
NEPAD adopted as a reference framework for the
Africa’s development (2000)
The Millennium Declaration (2000, MDGs)
The Poverty Reduction Strategies (PRSs)
All these initiatives recognize that women and
men face different socio-economic challenges
To be effective, they therefore, need to reflect
the situation of women and men
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Why are Gender Statistics Critical?
Thus, the importance of gender statistics in the
implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of
these initiatives and others
Gender statistics: Data collected, compiled and
analyzed taking in consideration that genderbased factors influence women’s and men’s
economic, social conditions, relations, and
access to resources
Gender statistics ≠ Sex disaggregated statistics
Sex: exogenous biological differences of men and women
Gender: socially constructed differences between
sexes (endogenous)
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Why are Gender Statistics
Critical? (Cont’d)
Gender statistics:
Allow for unbiased evidence-based policy
formulation and decision making
Address issues of inequalities and empowerment of
women
Raise consciousness, persuade policy makers and
other stakeholders to take into account the gender
dimension in policy and decision making
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Gender Statistics Challenges in
Africa
Inadequate advocacy for gender statistics: lack
of strong commitment to gender statistics
development by NSS
Lack of mainstreaming of gender statistics in
statistical programmes and activities
Lack of technical skills and adequate
statistical infrastructure (sampling frames,
classifications, concepts, definitions and
methods)
Inadequate gender sensitive data management
(archiving, analysis, and dissemination)
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ECA’s Response to
Gender Statistics
Challenges
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Selected UNECA’s Initiatives
ECA’s initiatives aimed at addressing gender
statistics challenges include:
The development of the African Gender and
Development Index (AGDI)
Engendering the P&R on Population and Housing
Censuses
Setting up an African gender statistics network
Engendering agricultural and trade statistics
Dissemination of methodologies and tools for the
development of gender sensitive data
Advocating and initiating the undertaking of Time
Use surveys
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The AGDI
A composite index made of two components:
The Gender Status Index (GSI): captures quantitatively
measurable issues related to gender equality
The African Women’s Progress Scoreboard (AWPS):
measures government policy performance regarding
transformation of social institutions that affect women’s
advancement and empowerment
3 blocks, 7 components, 12 sub components, 42 indicators
Some desirable features of the AGDI?
Incorporation of qualitative issues
Monitoring mechanism to assess performance in
implementing the various instruments African countries
have ratified (CEDAW, BPFA, ACHPR, etc.)
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Engendering the P&R on
Population and Housing Censuses
Importance of PHCs:
Primary source of information about the number
and characteristics of a given population
Completeness of coverage and the details they
provide about the population in local areas provide
a need that no other data source can meet
Provide the sampling frame for many other
statistical infrastructures (surveys)
The sole source of information on population and
housing characteristics for some countries
A potential source for gender-based
information at the lowest level possible
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Engendering the P&R on
Population and Housing Censuses
(Cont’d)
Review and recommendations on how to take
into account gender perspectives in census
undertaking in the framework of the 2010
RPHC
Built on:
On-going work on the AGDI and its sectoral
components
Tools on gender statistics and time use developed
by the UNSD and the UNECA
On-going work on the African Supplement to the
P&R on PHC undertaken by the UNECA
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Engendering the P&R on
Population and Housing Censuses
(Cont’d)
Review various stages of PHCs with a view to
engender them
Planning and design:
selection of topics, coverage, and frame shall reflect
gender relations an opportunities
Methodology:
concepts, definitions, questionnaire, coding shall
reflect gender diversities in the society
Data collection, capture and treatment:
respondents, imputation, quality checks
Data analysis, presentation, and dissemination:
tabulations, outputs
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The Way Forward
Extend
the AGDI to more African
countries
Advocating for the creation of gender
statistics units in NSOs
Putting in place a regional gender
statistics programme
Considering the creation of an African
gender statistics City Group under the
umbrella of the Statistical Commission for
Africa
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Conclusions
Mainstreaming gender within NSS is of
paramount importance
NSOs need to be provided with adequate
resources to coordinate and generate relevant
Gender sensitive data and make them
accessible to the public at large
Reinforcing the capacity for the production
and use of gender responsive data is crucial in
the formulation of comprehensive gender
sensitive policies that benefit the entire society
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Thank you!
African Centre for Statistics
Visit us at http:www.uneca.org/statistics/
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