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- myknowpolitics
Political Parties
In a representative democracy, political parties are vitally important. Political parties function as a link between state institutions and local grassroots organizations. It is political parties that aggregate interests, present political alternatives and nominate candidates. In all such matters, the political parties play an essential role for the advancement of women and the promotion of equality, as they function as the gatekeepers of candidate selection and political power. In this section, you will find information on the role of political parties in promoting women.
Sub-topics:
- Candidate Selection
- Internal Organization
- Outreach
- Parties in Parliament
- Party Funding
- Party Regulation
- Policy and Platform Development
- Political Parties (general)
- Women’s Party Sections
From the Library
World: Open Forum: Will the U.S. follow India's example?
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Thu, 2010-03-18 04:07
Summary:
The leadership of women in politics took a new turn in 1993 when India put into place a 50 percent quota for women at the level of local governance. From 1993 onward, more than 1 million women have served on Indian village, block and district-level councils.
On March 8, the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day, a bill was proposed in the Indian parliament -- and successfully passed the next day -- imposing a 33 percent quota for women in India's federal and state assemblies.
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To read the complete news piece please visit SFGate.
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India: Women get one-third share in Gadkari team
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2010-03-16 16:10
Summary:
Women have got their place under the sun in Bharatiya Janata Party president Nitin Gadkari’s new team of office-bearers and an effort has been made to take forward the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh chief Mohan Bhagwat’s ‘diktat’ on the need to give the party a youthful look.
The 121-member new National Executive Committee has as many as 40 women members, nearly one-third of the total, as mandated by the party constitution amended during the tenure of the outgoing BJP president Rajnath Singh.
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To read the complete news story please visit The Hindu
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Myanmar: Amid Threats, Women Dissidents Stick to Political Beliefs
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Thu, 2010-03-11 22:08
Summary:
While Aung San Suu Kyi remains the most widely-known woman suppressed for her political views in Burma, the jails in that military-ruled country continue to be filled by lesser-known women dissidents being held on a range of questionable charges.
Mid-February saw the latest group of female political activists thrown into jail with a two-year prison term, including hard labour, for a "crime" they committed four months ago – donating religious literature to a Buddhist monastery, an act that the junta deemed as "disturbing the peace."
Body:
To read the complete story please visit IPS News.
Tags:
- Advocacy & Lobbying
- Campaign Planning and Strategy
- Civic Education
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- Crisis Management
- Electoral Systems and Laws
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- Parliaments & Representatives
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- Political Parties
- World News
Enhancing Women’s Political Participation: A Policy Note for Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States
This Policy Note presents a set of pragmatic recommendations that will enable policy makers to enhance women’s political participation in the region. These measures are the product of six national roundtable discussions organized in 2008 in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Poland, Turkey and Ukraine as well as a regional conference in Turkey in December 2008. This Policy Note also presents the current status of, and opportunities for women’s participation in leadership and decision-making processes in the region. Based on the evidence and regional data collected and analysed, this Policy Note is for parliamentarians, government officials, legislators, political party members, civil society organizations working on enhancing women’s political participation and media with the recommended policy and action options in the following three areas:
1) Legal and institutional frameworks to promote women’s political participation;
2) Mechanisms and strategies to promote women’s political participation; and
3) Partnerships for women’s political participation: civil society organizations and the media.
- Committees
- Engendering Legislation/Budgets
- Europe
- Institution Building
- National Legislature/Parliament
- Parliamentary Caucuses
- Parliaments & Representatives
- Parties in Parliament
- Party Regulation
- Policy and Platform Development
- Political Parties
- Post-conflict and Transitional Participation
- Slovakia
- Guide / Training Material
Philippines: Asia-Pacific Women Have Long Way to Go–UN
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2010-03-09 03:32
Summary:
Women in the Asia-Pacific region have little economic and political power, impacting economic growth prospects of developing nations, the United Nations said in a report released Monday.
According to the UN Asia-Pacific Human Development Report to mark International Women’s Day, the region ranked near the worst in the world on issues such as protecting women from violence or upholding their rights to property.
“The key message [of the report] is that to meet any development goals that a society sets, you need the full participation and involvement of women,” Helen Clark, head of the UN Development Program (UNDP), said.
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To read the complete news piece please visit Inquirer Politics.
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India: No Stopping Reserved Seats for Women in Parliament
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Tue, 2010-03-09 03:26
Summary:
With assured backing from India's main opposition groups, the ruling Congress party hopes to see voted through in the upper house of Parliament Monday a bill reserving 33 percent of seats in national and provincial legislatures for women.
"The timing is right just now,’’ says Ranjana Kumari, a prominent proponent of the bill and president of Women Power Connect, an influential lobby of some 700 women's organisations and individuals that trains women with support from the United Nations Development Programme’s Democracy Fund.
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To read the complete news piece please visit IPS News.
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Angola: Percentage of women in Angolan parliament meets international standard
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Fri, 2010-03-05 09:23
Summary:
The number of women in the Angolan National Assembly repre sents 39 per cent of the total number of parliamentarians in the country and the figure meets the world's established quota, according to a report from the Angolan News Agency (ANGOP).
The was revealed Thursday in New York, US, by the Angolan MP, Faustina Fernandes Inglês de Almeida Alves, while addressing the 1-12 March Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) meeting, as part of the 54th session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women which began Monday at UN headquarters.
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To read the complete news story please visit Afrique En Ligne.
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Mauritius: The Women in the Shadows
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Fri, 2010-03-05 09:07
Summary:
The paltry participation of women in politics is but an extension of their limited bearing on meaningful decision- making in general. To improve that, the condition of the ordinary woman has to be improved first. Also, empowering women means giving them the opportunity to take their lives into their own hands. This is not possible for as long as our archaic mentalities, fuelled by the intervention of religious and socio-cultural groups, keep pushing them down.
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To read the complete story please visit AllAfrica.com.
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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.
Cambodia: Crusader Rowing Upstream in Cambodia
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Wed, 2010-03-03 12:24
Summary:
Ms. Mu Sochua is a member of a new generation of women who are working their way into the political systems of countries across Asia and elsewhere, from local councils to national assemblies and cabinet positions.
A former minister of women’s affairs, she did as much as anyone to put women’s issues on the agenda of Cambodia as it emerged in the 1990s from decades of war and mass killings. But she lost her public platform in 2004 when she broke with the government, and she is now finding it as difficult to promote her ideas as it is to simply gain attention as a candidate.
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To read the complete story please visit NY Times.
Tags:
- Advocacy & Lobbying
- Asia and the Pacific
- Cambodia
- Campaigns
- Candidate Selection
- Committees
- Constituency Outreach
- Election Observations
- Elections and Quotas
- Electoral Systems and Laws
- Engendering Legislation/Budgets
- Media and Message
- Parliaments & Representatives
- Political Parties
- Quotas
- Skills-Building
- Volunteer Recruitment
- Voter Education for Women
- Working with men
- World News
MENA: Gap Lingers Between Women's Political and Legal Rights
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Wed, 2010-03-03 11:58
Summary:
The 591-page study released by Freedom House on Wednesday, supported through grants by the U.N. Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), contends that while women in the region suffer from greater inequality than women elsewhere, they now enjoy greater economic opportunities, access to education, and increased participation in the political process than in years before.
"There are more women entrepreneurs, more women doctors, more women PhDs, and more women in universities, than ever before," said Jennifer Windsor, executive director of Freedom House. "However, substantial roadblocks remain for women pursuing careers. These findings remind us of the complexities of women's status in the Middle East."
Body:
To read the complete news story please visit IPS News.
Tags:
- Advocacy
- Advocacy & Lobbying
- Candidate Selection
- Civic Education
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- Decision-Making
- Election Observations
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- Engendering Legislation/Budgets
- Finance and Budgeting
- Internal Organization
- Leadership
- National Legislature/Parliament
- North Africa/Middle East
- Other Elected Officials
- Outreach
- Parliamentary Caucuses
- Parliaments & Representatives
- Political Parties
- Quotas
- Skills-Building
- Voter Education for Women
- World News
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.
Body:
To read the complete story please visit IPS News.
Tags:
- Advocacy
- Advocacy & Lobbying
- Candidate Selection
- Chile
- Civic Education
- Constituency Outreach
- Elections and Quotas
- Electoral Systems and Laws
- Engendering Legislation/Budgets
- National Legislature/Parliament
- Other Elected Officials
- Parliamentary Caucuses
- Parliaments & Representatives
- Political Parties
- Quotas
- The Americas
- World News
Sri Lanka: Milinda says change the political culture by getting more women in politics
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Mon, 2010-03-01 16:10
Summary:
Women could play a vital role in bringing about a positive change in the political culture which prevails in Sri Lanka. However, unfortunately the number of women entering politics remains abysmally low. This was one of the views expressed by Leader of the Sri Lanka National Congress and UPFA candidate for Colombo District, Milinda Moragoda, at a neighborhood meeting with a group of residents from Kirulapona recently.
Body:
To read the complete story please visit Lanka Web.
Tags:
- Advocacy
- Advocacy & Lobbying
- Asia and the Pacific
- Campaigns
- Civil Society Organizations
- Cross-Cutting Issues
- Elections and Quotas
- Electoral Systems and Laws
- Engendering Legislation/Budgets
- National Legislature/Parliament
- Parliamentary Caucuses
- Parliaments & Representatives
- Political Parties
- Quotas
- Sri Lanka
- World News
Iraq: Iraqi women look to lift voice in March 7 polls
Submitted by iKNOW Politics on Mon, 2010-03-01 10:20
Summary:
The role of women in the lead-up to the March 7 polls -- and the roles they will attain in the next government -- are a barometer of the direction Iraq is heading as it struggles to end violence and create stability ahead of a U.S. withdrawal. Iraq's next parliament will have at least 82 female members -- but only, most would argue, because the constitution drafted under U.S. influence in 2005 guarantees them a quarter of seats.
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To read the complete news story Reuters India.
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