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Monitoring progress towards gender equitable development

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Title: African Symposium on Statistical Development Cape Town, South Africa 30 Jan 02 Feb 2006 Author: Sibylle.Marxgut Last modified by: United Nations – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Monitoring progress towards gender equitable development


1
Monitoring progress towards gender equitable
development
  • Francesca Perucci
  • Statistics Division, DESA
  • United Nations, New York

2
Outline
  • Can we monitor development in all its
    gender-based dimensions?
  • An attempt to go beyond MDG Indicators
  • Conclusions and way forward

3
How far have we gone?
  • The call for improved availability of data on
    women and men started with the first World
    Womens Conference in 1975.
  • The first comprehensive compilation of data on
    women and men presented at the Worlds Women
    Conference in Nairobi in 1985.
  • 1995 Beijing Platform for Action, a detailed
    plan for the production and use of gender
    statistics is adopted.

4
How far have we gone?
  • Almost 34 years from the first call for
    statistics on women and men, can we fulfill the
    current monitoring requirements? Can we monitor
    progress towards gender equality and womens
    empowerment? Can we monitor gender equitable
    progress towards all development goals, including
    the MDGs?

5
How do we monitor progress towards the
development goals?
Embodies the goals of the last decades
Millennium Declaration in 2000

Eight universally-agreed development Goals (MDGs)
  • Development is not exclusively economic, but also
    embraces human, social and environmental
    dimensions

Specific measurable and time-bound targets
6
Gender equality as a necessary condition for
development
  • There is universal recognition that gender
    equality and womens empowerment are necessary
    conditions to achieve development
  • Women contribute to household income
  • Gender equality and womens empowerment are
    necessary to achieve universal primary education,
    lower under-five mortality, improved maternal
    health, and lower likelihood of contracting
    HIV/AIDS
  • Womens greater control over household resource
    allocation improve childrens health, nutrition
    and education

7
Need to monitor gender equality and womens
empowerment
Governments need to honor existing international
commitments to mainstream gender and promote the
empowerment of women into all development policies
Data should be available to support this effort
and to identify the progress that is being
achieved
8
Monitoring Goal 3 - Promote gender equality and
empower women
Indicators Ratio of girls to boys in primary,
secondary and tertiary education Share of women
in wage employment in the non-agricultural
sector Proportion of seats held by women in
national parliament

9
Are MDG Indicators adequate to monitor gender
based aspects of development?
  • Only some of the dimensions of gender equality
    and empowerment are captured by the three
    indicators in Goal 3
  • The three indicators only partially address the
    dimensions they are expected to monitor.
  • There are problems of data availability and data
    quality.
  • Although other aspects of womens lives are
    covered by some of the other goals, few of the
    indicators under those goals are appropriate or
    sufficient to fully assess the situation of women
    and men.

10
Goal 3 Modification of existing indicators
Share of women in wage employment in the
non-agricultural sector
Share of women in employment by type 1. Share
of women in total employment 2. Share of women
in agricultural employment 3. Share of women in
non-agricultural wage employment (current MDG
indicator) 3.1 Informal wage employment 4.
Share of women in non-agricultural
self- employment 4.1 informal self-employment
11
Goal 3 Proposed new indicators
Proportion of women who ever had a partner, 15-49
years old, who have ever experienced physical
violence by an intimate partner
Domestic violence
Hours per day (or year) women and men spend
fetching water and collecting fuel
Infrastructure and womens contribution to the
economy
Land ownership by sex Housing title,
disaggregated by male, female or jointly held

Control of resources
Percentage of women elected to local government
bodies
Participation in local governments
12
Monitoring Goal 3 Recommendations by the
sub-group
  • For most of the indicators proposed the current
    data availability was still insufficient to
    produce the indicator for all regions and for two
    points in time (for trend analysis).
  • The focus should be on promoting adequate data
    collection programmes.

13
Monitoring Goal 3 Recommendations by the
sub-group
Womens empowerment in the are of health and
their ability to control their reproductive life
  • Adolescent birth rate
  • Unmet need for family planning

New indicators included in the new MDG framework,
under Goal 5, presented to the General Assembly,
September 2007
14
And even on existing indicators, there are
problems with data availability MDG-indicator
11 Share of women in wage employment in the
non-agricultural sector countries with at
least 2 data points since 1990
67
83
73
67
73
20
24
74
Source www.mdgs.un.org,
15
Can we monitor development in all its
gender-based dimensions?
  • Available data are insufficient The data
    available from official national and
    international sources still do not allow us to
    monitor the basic aspects of development related
    to gender and to inform policies with the
    necessary statistics.
  • Existing indicators are not adequate to reflect
    gender based dimensions Statistics and
    indicators currently produced and used for
    monitoring indicate that statistical systems
    (nationally and internationally) have failed to
    fully integrate a gender perspective in all areas
    of statistical production and to provide policy
    makers with the kind of data required for
    gender-sensitive policy formulation and monitoring

16
Outline
  • Can we monitor development in all its
    gender-based dimensions?
  • An attempt to go beyond MDG Indicators
  • Conclusions and way forward

17
Most of the burden of collecting drinking water
falls on women and girls
18
Reducing gender inequality is key to addressing
womens vulnerability to HIV/AIDS
19
Health care must be made available to all
pregnant women and at all deliveries
20
Women's significant contribution to ensuring food
security often goes unpaid
21
Outline
  • Can we monitor development in all its
    gender-based dimensions?
  • An attempt to go beyond MDG Indicators
  • Conclusions and way forward

22
The MDG effect
  • The political importance of the Millennium
    Declaration and of monitoring progress towards
    the MDGs have contributed to
  • Bringing about an increased recognition of the
    importance of statistics for policy-making and
    monitoring
  • Highlighting the overall lack of adequate
    statistical capacity in many developing countries
  • A higher recognition and awareness of the urgent
    need to build stronger national statistical
    systems
  • The development of new capacity building
    initiatives

23
Monitoring and the need for statistics
  • The political importance of the MDGs and the need
    to monitor progress have shaped the development
    of indicators and related statistical
    capacity-building programmes over the past few
    years.

24
But are we seizing the opportunity?
  • The MDGs and the new monitoring requirements have
    not only created the need but also provided an
    opportunity to improve data and gender-based
    data.
  • The opportunity should not be lost to ensure that
    the need for improved gender data is addressed
  • Statisticians concerned with the development of
    gender statistics need to become fully involved
    in the implementation of these initiatives and
    programmes.

25
The way forward A new environment
  • The urgency for development partners to address
    the lack of data has become more evident
  • Important new initiatives for statistical
    capacity-building
  • Marrakech Action Plan for the improvement of
    development statistics
  • Steering and Working Groups on MDG Africa
    Thematic Group on Statistical Systems
  • IAEG on MDG Indicators initiatives in
    statistical capacity building
  • 2006 ECOSOC resolution and recommendations by the
    UN Statistical Commission

26
Two important steps
  • Ensure that capacity building programmes and
    initiatives to improve the financing for the
    development of statistics also include a gender
    perspective
  • Develop standards and guidelines through the
    formal intergovernmental process (UN SC) to
    ensure full involvement and commitment by
    national statistical systems

27
  • THANK YOU
  • Visit mdgs.un.org
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