África al Sur del Sahara

Sierra Leone: Salone Women Hold Transformation Vigil

Enviado por iKNOW Politics el Mar, 2012-01-31 13:51

Resumen: 

The steering committee of the Sierra Leone Conference on Development and Transformation Sunday January 29 held a vigil at the Youyi Building gardens. The vigil which climaxed the lightning of the development and transformation candle was witnessed by women from various women organizations, councilors and other women groups across the country.

In a declaration statement, the women said that after careful reflection and debate on the thematic areas and other pertinent issues relating to the interest and the future advancement of women and girls in Sierra Leone, they propose that this women's declaration be integrated into the conference proceedings and adopted as part of the actionable outcome for the next 25 to 50 years.

The declaration further stated that for the past 50 years, women who formed 52% of the population were marginalized and discriminated against in politics and decision-making, when they should have been on board at every stage of the developmental and transformation process of the nation.

Cuerpo: 

Read more in All Africa, posted 31 January


The Security Sector and Gender in West Africa: A survey of police, defence, justice and penal services in ECOWAS states

This report, published in English and French, aims to systematically document the status of gender integration in the security sectors in 14 Member States of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
The report is designed to be a resource for people working in, or with, security sector institutions; for those interested in governance and development in West Africa; and for those involved in gender-related issues. It combines information gathered by in-country researchers, interviews, document analysis and desk research. Much of the data in this report has never before been published or compared across countries in the region.
The survey is guided by the following two questions: Are security sector institutions providing adequate response to the different security and justice needs of men, women, boys and girls? What steps have been taken to create internally equitable, representative and non-discriminatory institutions?
The report contains three main sections: an introduction, a summary and analysis of findings, and individual country profiles. The introduction provides background on the survey rationale, methodology and research challenges. The summary and analysis of findings offers a cross-country and cross-institution analysis of the survey findings, and includes a list of recommendations. The 14 extensive country profiles present easy-to-read yet detailed information structured by 101 indicators on national governance, police services, armed forces and gendarmerie, the justice system and penal services.

Gender and ICT

This e-Primer looks at information and communications technology (ICT) for development through a gender lens. It provides a gender perspectives to issues of ICT policies; access and control; education, training and skill development; and content development, and introduces a framework to integrate gender in ICT for development and empower women.

Malawi: women protest over 'trouser attacks'

Enviado por iKNOW Politics el Vie, 2012-01-20 13:24

Resumen: 

Hundreds of people have protested in Blantyre in Malawi about attacks on women for wearing trousers.

Some women were this week beaten and stripped by vendors on the streets of the capital, Lilongwe, and Blantyre for not wearing traditional dress.

A BBC reporter says women wore trousers and mini-skirts to the demonstration to show their outrage.

Cuerpo: 

Read more on BBC News, published 20 Jan


A Practical Guide to Constitution Building

A Practical Guide to Constitution Building provides an essential foundation for understanding constitutions and constitution building. Full of world examples of ground-breaking agreements and innovative provisions adopted during processes of constitutional change, the Guide offers a wide range of examples of how constitutions develop and how their development can establish and entrench democratic values. Beyond comparative examples, the Guide contains in-depth analysis of key components of constitutions and the forces of change that shape them.

Chapter 2 includes a section on "Principles related to gender" and Chapter 3 includes a section on "The rights of women".

Ghana: Women Still Sidelined Politically As 2012 Election Approaches

Enviado por iKNOW Politics el Vie, 2012-01-13 08:17

Resumen: 

Last September a striking story stole the headlines of newspapers and media outlets all across Ghana. Samia Nkrumah, the daughter of the nation's founding father, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, became the first female chairperson of a political party in the country's history as an independent state.

The event was lauded as a giant leap forward in women's political participation within Ghana and was rich in symbolism: the daughter of the fallen visionary who delivered independence to the small West African nation and made it a known entity to the rest of the world had become the first female chairperson of the political party her father founded.

The Convention People's Party (CPP) was politically powerful before President Kwame Nkrumah was overthrown in a coup in 1966. But in 2011 the CPP casts a thin shadow of its former glory - it holds only one seat in parliament and its relevance derives from its role in the independence movement and establishing the first republic. Samia's victory was a significant achievement, but it does not reflect a broader shift in the attitudes towards women in politics, within the citizenry and major political parties, but rather underscored a deeper problem within Ghana's political culture. Contrary to the celebratory newspaper headlines, the event demonstrated that the political sphere continues to be the dominion of men.

Cuerpo: 

Read more in AllAfrica.com, published 11 January


SENEGAL: Presidential elections

Enviado por iKNOW Politics el Jue, 2012-01-12 13:28
2012-02-26
2012-02-26
US/Eastern
Haz clic aquí
Pais: 
Senegal
Lugar: 

Description of government structure:

    * Chief of State: President Abdoulaye WADE

    * Head of Government: Prime Minister Soulayemane Ndene NDIAYE

    * Assembly: Senegal has a bicameral Parliament (Parlement) consisting of the Senate (Sénat) with 100 seats and the National Assembly (Assemblée Nationale) with 150 seats.

 

Description of electoral system:

    * The President is elected by absolute majority vote through a two-round system to serve a 5-year term.

    * The Prime Minister is appointed by the president.

    * In the Senate (Sénat), 35 members are indirectly elected by an electoral college to serve 5-year terms and 65 members are appointed by the president to serve 5-year terms*. In the National Assembly (Assemblée Nationale), 60 members are elected through a closed-list proportional representation system to serve 5-year terms and 90 members are elected by plurality vote in single-member constituencies to serve 5-year terms.

Descripción: 


Kenya: Women Set to Make Their Mark in Politics

Enviado por iKNOW Politics el Mar, 2012-01-10 09:04

Resumen: 

The August 2012 elections in Kenya will open doors to massive political participation by women for the first time ever. The new constitution in effect since August 2010 contains a provision that should radically change political representation for women in this East African country.

Women's rights activists in Kenya are confident that as a result of constitutional Article 81 (b), which states that "not more than two-thirds of the members of elective public bodies shall be of the same gender," their problems of under- representation in key government bodies will become a thing of the past.

Cuerpo: 

Read the whole story in IPS, published 4 january


Global: The year that was 2011 - Women in public spaces

Enviado por Piyoo el Vie, 2012-01-06 16:40

Piyoo's picture
Resumen: 

As we wind down from 2011 I take a few moments to reflect and look back at not just the significant events of this year but what it portends for the years to come. From the role of women in mobilizing action to what led to widespread uprising against established regimes in North Africa to the awarding of nobel peace prize to Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Leymah Gbowee of Liberia; and Tawakkol Karman of Yemen women have been in news through the year.

Cuerpo: 

We have also seen a renewed focus on discourses that emphasize the role of technologies in securing a range of public goods including facilitating civic engagement and social participation, and providing more efficient access to government services while enabling a more participatory form of democratic involvement. In a report in May this year, the UN special rapporteur declared Internet had “become an indispensable tool for realizing a range of human rights.” The role of women though lauded for the ease of use of social-technologies for furthering their involvement has been surrounded by doubts and questions around continuing the engagement as their countries move into the next phase.

The role of women in 2011 also presents a good starting point for an understanding of the conditions that makes a moment transformational. Transformative moments, come in personal life as much as in political life. They rely on reconfigurations of the assumptions of what is common knowledge and how this common knowledge is translated into known-knowns by the interactions on the web. That is to say, this year we saw as loudly and clearly as possible, women not only sounded the call that brought people to the streets in the middle east but were adept at using technology in sounding this call.Thereby reconfiguring the assumption of what was considered common knowledge about women in the middle east and women and technology. The shattering of this common knowledge was then followed by the “new” known-knowns on the web of “Arab women as revolutionary”.

However in my opinion the power of this newly acquired understanding of known-knowns to shape contentious gender politics is only one of the numerous important factors that is needed to effect significant change in domestic politics. Both the interaction frequency (on the web) and closeness of relationship (of the actors on the web) are characteristics which influence the strength of ties created on the web and thereby determine the power and influence of these known-knowns to impact change. As has been witnessed in the subsequent move to electoral processes in Egypt and Tunisia where realization that overthrowing dictators was easier than overturning the pervasive supremacy of men was apparent in the absence of women in the Constitutional Amendment Committee. This also speaks to the short shelf life of known-knowns of the web and avoiding mistaking information for influence in domestic decision making.

Democratization takes place within a social, economic and historical context and does not necessarily entail a democratization of power relations in society at large, particularly between men and women. This of course has direct implications on the role that women can play. The inherent difficulties of building effective institutions for enabling equal democratic participation by all requires a move from mass mobilization to organizational capacities during transition. This is one of the many hurdles that women continue to face in seeking a seat at the democratic table.

However, putting the metaphorical ‘women’s right genie’ back in the bottle is no longer an option. The power of women in public spaces has never been more visually captured or vividly experienced by the world before as during the Arab spring. This year was an epochal period of activism which was built up because of this generation’s advances in education and professions while embracing the ability of Internet to communicate, organize and publicize everywhere, instantaneously. The future for women in public spaces can be best summed up in the words of Larbi Ben M’Hidi in the Battle of Algiers, “It’s hard enough to start a revolution, even harder to sustain it, and hardest of all to win it. But it’s only afterwards, once we’ve won, that the real difficulties begin.”

Piyoo Kochar

(The opinions expressed here are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views of current,  past or future employers)


Mauritius: introduction of quota for female candidates in local elections

Enviado por iKNOW Politics el Vie, 2012-01-06 09:54

Resumen: 

Under a new gender quota law introduced in Mauritius, at least one-third of the candidates in local elections must be women. But the adoption of a national quota is not yet on the horizon, even though just 18% of legislators are women and there are only two female cabinet ministers.

The new quota came into effect on 1 January. The next local elections are due by April in the five towns and 108 villages in this island nation of 1.3 million people.

Cuerpo: 

Read more in the Guardian, published 6. Jan