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The Americas
During the past 30 years, great strides have been made to advance the role and position of women in politics in the Americas. The 1990s in particular witnessed impressive advances in women’s political leadership in this region, mainly due to the use of quotas, a shift in political will and international encouragement.
From the Library
The Americas
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Sun, 2007-02-18 20:50
During the past 30 years, great strides have been made to advance the role and position of women in politics in the Americas. The 1990s in particular witnessed impressive advances in women’s political leadership in this region, mainly due to the use of quotas, a shift in political will and international encouragement.
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Combating Trafficking in Persons: A Handbook for Parliamentarians
Jointly produced by the IPU and UNODC, the Handbook on Combating Trafficking in Persons is intended to encourage parliamentarians to take an active part in stopping human trafficking. It contains a compilation of international laws and good practices developed to combat human trafficking. It offers guidance on how national legislation can be brought in line with international standards. It outlines measures to prevent commission of the crime of trafficking in persons, to prosecute offenders and to protect victims. It also contains advice on how to report on this crime and how to enlist civil society in the cause.
Empowering Parliaments through the Use of ICTs
The study, published by the United Nations Development Programme, has developed an analytical framework that focuses on the three core functions of Parliaments - legislation, representation and oversight - and establishes links between them. It provides concrete examples of the importance of ICTs for the empowerment and increased credibility of parliamentary institutions.
Assessing Legislation - A manual for legislators
It aims at providing the legislators with the necessary tools that would help them in assessing legislations and proposing them to promote social and democratic change in their countries. The guide highlights and discusses several important topics such as the role of the legislator in facilitating socio-political and economic change, the legislative theory, and the methodology for problem solving, in addition to assessing the technical sufficiency for the proposed law.
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Guatemala: Women Make Headway in Politics - and Want More
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Fri, 2010-03-05 09:02
Summary:
"The election of a woman president in Costa Rica is a step forward for women in the region's political arena, and a qualitative advance in terms of political democratisation," political analyst José Dávila Membreño told IPS.
Chinchilla, of the governing National Liberation Party (PLN), became the third woman president to be democratically elected in Central America, after Presidents Mireya Moscoso in Panama (1999-2004) and Violeta Chamorro in Nicaragua (1990-1997).
"Women have been discriminated against, with a view that they should stay at home and that they are not fit for public responsibilities. But this attitude is gradually being overcome, because women have shown that when they occupy public office, the quality of politics can improve," said the political scientist.
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To read the complete news story please visit IPS News.
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Women in Politics 2010 (Poster)
This poster-sized map is a "snapshot" of the presence of women in executive and legislative branches of government as of January 2010. The poster provides information on the percentage of women in ministerial ranks, women in parliaments and women in the highest decision-making bodies, as well as information on the ministerial portfolios held by women throughout the world.
IPU: Beijing goals on women in politics still unmet, new report finds
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Wed, 2010-03-03 09:45
Summary:
New York/Geneva, 3 March 2010 - No. 336
Taking stock of women’s political participation today gives cause for guarded satisfaction. Fifteen years after the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, overall improvements have been registered in parliamentary and executive spheres of government. Still, the target of gender balance in politics is far off in too many countries. In the words of Anders B. Johnsson, Secretary General of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), “Things have certainly improved, but not nearly as much as we would want them to”.
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This is the main conclusion of a new survey on progress and setbacks of women in parliament released by the IPU. The survey is being published along with a new World Map of Women in Politics 2010, a poster-size map produced in cooperation with the United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women showing the number of women politicians by country and region.
Parliaments
By the start of 2010, the global average for the proportion of women parliamentarians reached a high of 18.8 per cent, compared to 1995, when it stood at 11.3 per cent. This equates to an average 0.5 percentage point gain per year. Ms. Rachel Mayanja, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Gender Issues, noted that ECOSOC had set a target of 30 per cent women in leadership positions to be met by 1995. “We are a far cry from this goal. But we are determined to finish the Beijing agenda. We cannot afford any further delays in action to achieve the gender equality goals, including for women’s political participation.”
While overall progress has been slow, some counties have progressed at a much faster pace than others. The number of parliamentary chambers reaching the 30-per-cent target now stands at 44 (16.7%) spread across 38 countries. This is a six-fold increase over 1995, when just seven chambers in seven countries achieved this goal. The range of 30 per cent-plus chambers is diverse and includes 16 in Europe, 13 in the Americas, 11 in Africa and four in the Asia-Pacific region. The number of chambers with a membership of 10 per cent or less women members has more than halved, from 62 per cent in 1995 to 27 per cent today.
However, it is clear that challenges to women’s political empowerment remain in all regions. In several parliaments there have only ever been a handful of women, and the number of parliamentary chambers where no women have seats has not shown any dramatic decline, dropping from 13 in 1995 to 10 today. Women’s advancement into leadership positions in parliament has been much slower than the improvement in access to parliament. From 24 in 1995, there were 35 women Presiding Officers at the helm of parliaments at the start of 2010.
Ministerial positions
For women in the Executive and Heads of State, overall progress is even slower than at the parliamentary level. As shown in the World Map, women count for just nine out of the 151 elected Heads of State (6%) in 2010, up from just eight women leaders in 2005.
On average, women hold 16 per cent of ministerial posts. In total, 30 countries have more than 30 per cent women members, with Cape Verde, Finland, Norway and Spain achieving over 50 per cent women ministers. At the other end of the spectrum, the number of countries with no women ministers has increased — from 13 in 2008 to 16 in 2010. The majority of these States are found in the Arab region, the Caribbean and the Pacific Islands.
Compared with 2008, there is more diversification in terms of the portfolios held by women. As with previous years, however, women tend to dominate portfolios related to social affairs, children and youth, women’s affairs, and increasingly the environment.
Detailed information on dedicated web page at: IPU.
Established in 1889 and with its Headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, the IPU - the oldest multilateral political organization in the world - currently brings together more than 150 affiliated national parliaments and eight associated regional assemblies. The world organization of parliaments also has an Office in New York, which acts as its Permanent Observer to the United Nations.
Contacts:
In Geneva: Ms. Luisa Ballin, IPU Information Officer. Tel.: ++41 22 919 41 16, e-mail: lb@mail.ipu.org and cbl@mail.ipu.org
In New York: Ms. Julie Ballington, IPU Programme Specialist, Gender Partnership Programme. Tel. ++1 202 557 58 80; e-mail jb@mail.ipu.org; ny-office@mail.ipu.org
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Chile: First Woman President Scores Points on Gender Front
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2010-03-02 08:36
Summary:
At the end of her term on Mar. 11, Michelle Bachelet will be stepping down with a tremendous level of popularity: 83 percent, a record in her country, and almost unheard of in the rest of the world.
The inauguration of rightwing President-elect Sebastián Piñera that day will close a chapter in the history of this South American country of 17 million people, governed by the centre-left coalition Concertación de Partidos por la Democracia since the return to democracy in 1990.
As a result of the gender equity policies implemented by the Bachelet administration, Chile will be the Latin American country with the most gains to show at the Mar. 1-12 meeting of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, in which governments will gather in New York for the 15-year review of the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform of Action adopted in 1995 at the Fourth World Conference on Women, held in the Chinese capital.
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To read the complete story please visit IPS News.
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- Advocacy
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UNDP: 54th Commission on the Status of Women - Beijing Plus 15
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Fri, 2010-02-26 15:09
Summary:
An overview of UNDP's engagement at the 54th Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), to be held from March 1 to March 12, 2010.
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This CSW is particularly notable as it will undertake a 15-year review of progress toward gender equality since the landmark Beijing Conference for Women in 1995. UNDP's focus during the CSW will be to underscore how progress on the Beijing Platform for Action’s 12 critical areas of concern will accelerate progress on the MDGs. Making this link – between gender equality and the MDGs – will also be important for the upcoming MDG Summit in September. The following Key Messages, Key Facts and event poster underscore this theme.
UNDP is organizing, co-hosting and participating in several notable events during the CSW. They include panel discussions on:
# The Price of Peace: Financing Gender Equality in Post-Conflict Recovery and Reconstruction. Co-hosted by UNDP and UNIFEM. Panelists include Mary Robinson Mary Robinson, President, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative and formerly President of Ireland and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ingrid Fiskaa, Norwegian State Secretary for International Development, Judy Cheng-Hopkins, Assistant Secretary-General for Peacebuilding Support, and Jordan Ryan, Assistant Secretary-General, and Director of the Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery, UNDP.
# Gender Equality and Climate Change: Opportunities and Challenges for the MDGs. Co-hosted by The International Alliance for Women, GCCA, UNDP, UNIFEM WEDO. Panelists include, Ambassador Melanne Verveer, US Ambassador for Global Women’s Affairs, Heidi Hautala, Chair, Finnish Council for Gender Equality and H.E. Ambassador Claude Heller, Permanent Mission to the United Nations, Mexico.
# Vision for a Better World: From Economic Crisis to Equality. Co-hosted by UNDP, IDRC and the Permanent Missions to the UN of Canada and Nicaragua. Panelists include Suzanne Clément, Coordinator/Head of Agency, Status of Women Canada, and Nafis Sadik, Special Adviser to the UN Secretary-General and Special Envoy for HIV/ AIDS in Asia.
# Take Action Now: The Pathway from Beijing to 2015. Co-hosted by UNDP, UNIFEM and the Governments of Denmark and Egypt. Panelists include Elizabeth Salguero, Parliament of Bolivia, Emily Sikazwe, Executive Director of Women for Change, Zambia and Ines Alberdi, Executive Director of UNIFEM.
# Launch of the Agenda for Accelerated Country Action for Women, Girls, Gender Equality and HIV, a UNAIDS event.
Panelists include . Ms. Asha Rose Migiro, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ms. Helen Clark, UNDP Administrator, Mr. Michel Sidibé, UNAIDS Executive Director (moderator) and Annie Lennox, Advocate for women, girls and HIV.
UNDP is also organizing and participating in panel discussions, breakfasts and side meetings on such topics as democratic governance and women’s rights; women, HIV and human rights; resourcing home-based caregivers in Africa; and ensuring women’s equitable participation and leadership in reconstruction in Haiti. For a complete list of side events involving UNDP, please see the attached flyer.
Daily updates on CSW events and sessions will be posted on GenderNet. You can also view the main agenda and full list of side events on the official CSW website. For further information about UNDP’s participation in the CSW, contact Kim Henderson in the Gender Team.
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