The
following are terms frequently used in the field of Gender.
Beijing
Conference (World Conferences on Women)
The three world conferences of the UN Decade for Women - held
in 1975 (Mexico City), 1980 (Copenhagen), and 1985 (Nairobi)
- were important mobilizing and awareness-raising events.
The Decade resulted in a consensus document, Nairobi Forward-Looking
Strategies for the advancement of Women to the Year 2000 (FLS).
This document contains a comprehensive set of strategies for
advancing the status of women worldwide. Ten years later,
the Fourth World Conference on Women was held in 1995 in Beijing,
China, to evaluate the achievements to date and plan the way
forward, The resulting Beijing Platform for Action was
a strong statement signed by the majority of governments in
the world. The platform for Action served as an impetus
for government action and a monitoring tool for NGOs to follow
the extent to which their governments were following through
on their national committments. These conferences have
created valuable opportunities for organizing influencing
policy making locally, nationally, regionally, and internationally.
Beijing
+5
This refers to the 5 year benchmark to measure the progress
made in implementing the Beijing Platform of Action.
An international meeting was convened in New York in June
2000 to discuss national achievements and constraints.
CEDAW
On 18 December 1979, the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women was
adopted by the United Nations General Assembly. It entered
into force as an international treaty on 3 September 1981
after the twentieth country had ratified it. By the tenth
anniversary of the Convention in 1989, almost one hundred
nations have agreed to be bound by its provisions.
The Convention was the culmination of more than thirty years
of work by the United Nations Commission on the Status of
Women (CSW), a body established in 1946 to monitor the situation
of women and to promote women's rights. The Commission's work
has been instrumental in bringing to light all the areas in
which women are denied equality with men. These efforts for
the advancement of women have resulted in several declarations
and conventions, of which the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women is the central
and most comprehensive document. CEDAW
Document at the UN.
Conscientisation.
This is a level of empowerment which concerns the individual
person's understanding of the development process in terms
of structural inequality; the realization by women and men
that their problems do not derive so much from their own personal
inadequacies but instead they are being subjected to a social
system of institutional discrimination against them.
Conscientisation. involves awareness and understanding of
the difference between sex roles and gender roles and that
gender roles are socially created and therefore can be changed
to promote equality.
CRC
Children's rights are most fully articulated in the Convention
on the Rights of the Child. Created over a period
of ten years with the input of representatives from different
societies, religions and cultures, the Convention was adopted
as an international human rights treaty on 20 November 1989.
CRC document
at UNICEF.
Empowerment:
A process through which men, women, boys and girls acquire
knowledge, skills and willingness to critically analyze their
situation and take appropriate action to change the status
quo of women and other marginalised groups in society.
Feminism.
A way of perceiving or interpreting a social situation from
perspective of women and other marginalised groups in society.
It further involved taking concrete action to remedy social
inequalities.
Gender.
Culturally and socially constructed roles, responsibilities
privileges, relations and expectations of women men girls
and boys,
Gender
Neutral.
Planning for women, men, boys and girls as if they are homogenous/not
taking into consideration their different needs and roles.
Experience has shown that gender neutral planning in reality
addresses the needs of the dominant group.
Gender
and
Development. GAD
This approach to development recognizes that women, poor men
and other disadvantaged groups are the victims of social structures
that impact them negatively. The ultimate goal of such an
approach is to create equitable and sustainable development
with women and men as decision-makers through empowering these
groups to create social transformation with a gender perspective.
It proposes taking into account the different practical and
strategic needs of women and men at all stages of a project
cycle, this involves gender mainstreaming. Gender and
Development has replaced the Women in Development (WID)
approach in most recent development literature but has yet
to be broadly implemented.
Gender
Awareness.
Recognition that women and men perform different roles in
society and therefore have different needs which must be recognized.
Gender
Equality.
Equal rights and opportunities for women , men, girls and
boys in all sectors, political, social , legal and economic.
Gender
Sensitivity.
Being aware that women and men perform different roles and
have different needs which must be planned for accordingly.
Gender
Framework
This is a tool for streamlining the analysis of needs and
issues of men, women girls and boys (especially their relationships
in society). It is also a guide for approacheing methodologies
and policies of an organisation.
Gender
Balance.
This is an ideal situation where women and men boys and girls
live harmoniously enjoying equal opportunities and have mutual
respect for each other.
Gender
Roles.
These are the different tasks and responsibilities and expectations
the society has defined and allocated to men and women girls
and boys. They are not necessarily determined by biological
make up and therefore they change with time and according
to the situation.
Gender
Focus.
This refers to specificly addressing the needs of women and
men, girls and boys in the society as determined by their
gender.
Gender
Blind.
This is a conscious or unconscious way of doing or saying
things without recognising or considering differences in position,
needs and feelings based on gender.
Gender
Bias.
This is a positive or negative attitude/practice towards either
female or male.
Gender
Stereotyping.
The assigning of roles, tasks and responsibilities to a particular
gender on the bias of preconceived prejudices.
Gender
Discrimination.
A difference in treatment of people based entirely on their
being male or female.This difference contributes to structural
inequality in society.
Gender
Disaggregated Data.
This is a classified information on the basis of genders e.,g
men, women, girls or boys. This data provides important
indicators of gender needs.
Gender
Equity.
Just treatment, balanced recognition and appreciation of both
women's and men's potential.
Gender
Analysis.
Critical examination of issues affecting both women and men
within a given situation or policy.
Gender
Mainstreaming.
Addressing gender issues in all development policies and projected
programmes irrespective of sector or type of project.
Mainstreaming is therefore the very opposite of a policy strategy
of segregating gender issues into separate "women's projects"
The term mainstreaming is used by those who see women's development
as being essentially concerned with women's participation
and empowerment to address the issues of gender inequality.
From this perspective the mainstreaming of gender issues entails
the transformation of the development process.
Gender
Policies:
Gender Neutral Policy.
Seeks to target selected men and women in order to realize
certain pre-determined goals and objectives, but such a policy
leaves the existing divisions of resources responsibilities
and capabilities intact. In this context such a policy
is gender sensitive but does not change the structural status
quo in a given situation.
Gender Specific Policy.
Is intended to target and benefit a specific gender in order
to achieve certain policy goals or to meet certain gender
specific needs more effectively. Gender specific policy
is in a way gender sensitive because its interventions are
intended to meet targeted needs of one or other gender within
existing distribution of resources and responsibilities.
These kinds of interventions are most often welfare oriented
but with potential of achieving transformatory impact when
critically planned for. In this way the difference between
a women-specific policy and a gender -blind policy is based
on the analysis of gender specific constraints and one that
is based on prior assumptions about proper roles of women.
Gender Transformative Policy.
Targets women men or both and recognizes the existence of
gender specific needs and constraints of each or both categories,
but also seeks to transform the existing gender relations
in a more equitable direction through the redistribution of
resources and responsibilities. Gender redistribute
is the most challenging policy intervention because it doesn't
not simply seek to channel resources to women within the existing
social framework but in principle questions the existing status
quo.
Practical
needs.
Those needs which are related to satisfying both men's women's
girls and boys basic material needs for their day to day survival
such as food, water, clothing and shelter.
Reproductive
roles.
Child bearing and rearing responsibilities for both men and
women. These are often borne more heavily by women.
Sex.
This is a biological make up of male and female.
Strategic
needs.
Needs that are related to changing the situation of marginalised
people, especially women and girls to reach social equaloty.
These include leadership and control over resources.
Women
in Development.
WID
An approach used in designing planning implementing and evaluating
women only focused programmes. It does not question
the relation of gender inequality and therefore tends to address
the symptoms rather than the causes of gender inequality.
An opposing and more recently developed view is Gender
and Development GAD theory
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