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Wikipedia

Gender mainstreaming

Gender mainstreaming is the public policy concept of assessing the implications for people of different genders of a planned policy action, including legislation and programmes. Mainstreaming offers a pluralistic approach that values the diversity among people of different genders.

The concept of gender mainstreaming was first proposed at the 1985 Third World Conference on Women and has subsequently been pushed in the United Nations development community. The idea was formally featured in 1995 at the Fourth World Conference on Women, and was cited in the document that resulted from the conference, the Beijing Platform for Action.

Definition

Most definitions of gender mainstreaming conform to the UN Economic and Social Council formally defined concept:

Mainstreaming a gender perspective is the process of assessing the implications for women and men of any planned action, including legislation, policies or programmes, in all areas and at all levels. It is a strategy for making women's as well as men's concerns and experiences an integral dimension of the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of policies and programmes in all political, economic and societal spheres so that women and men benefit equally and inequality is not perpetuated. The ultimate goal is to achieve gender equality.[1]

There are different approaches to gender mainstreaming:

Institutional perspective: The ways in which specific organizations adopt and implement mainstreaming policies. This will often involve an analysis of how national politics intersects with international norms and practices.[2]

Discursive perspective: Queries the ways in which mainstreaming reproduces power relations through language and issue-framing. This approach will often involve looking at documents, resolutions and peace agreements to see how they reproduce the narratives of gender in a political context.[2]

These approaches are not necessarily competing, and can be seen as complementary.

 
Gender Mainstreaming Seminar 2015

The ways in which approaches are used, however, can also reflect differing feminist theories. For example, liberal feminism is strongly invoked by mainstreaming through the binary approach of gender in strict relation to the public sphere of policymaking. Poststructuralist feminism can be seen in mainstreaming thought which seeks to displace gender difference as the sole axis of difference and to highlight the diversity of policy its ramifications.[2]

Principles

 
Col. Shafiqa Quraishi, Director of the Afghan National Police Gender Mainstreaming Unit, speaks at an ANP female recruiting conference covered how to recruit and train the additional 5,000 women that Afghan President Hamid Karzai has mandated be added to the police force by 2014

Prioritizing gender equality

Gender mainstreaming tries, among others, to ascertain a gender equality perspective across all policy areas.[3] According to Jacqui True, a Professor of politics and international relations, "[e]very policy or piece of legislation should be evaluated from the perspective of whether or not it reduces or increases gender inequalities."[3] This concept of gender equality is not limited to formal equality, it includes as well equality de facto, which is a more holistic approach to gender policy in order to tackle the interconnected causes that create an unequal relation between the sexes in all areas of life (work, politics, sexuality, culture, and violence).[4]

Lombardo notes that "[t]here should be evidence that gender equality objective and policies of special concern for women (for example, social policy) have been prioritized in the organization among competing objectives (in terms of financial and human resources, type of measures adopted, voting systems used, and so forth)."[4]

Incorporating gender into politics and decision making

Puechguirbal takes a discursive approach to argue that in order to successfully mainstream a gendered perspective in politics, language needs to be reevaluated and used to change the parameters of how women are perceived.

Historically, documents concerning international agreements, peacekeeping arrangements and legal resolutions have perpetuated stereotypes that disempower women. This can be seen through the use of language, even as simply as in the UN Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration program's (DDR) motto: 'One man, on weapon'.[2]

Reference of gender issues should be found in all policy areas. "There must be evidence that the mainstream political agenda has been reoriented by rethinking and rearticulating policy ends and means from a gender perspective," Lombardo says, referencing Rounaq Jahan, a political scientists, feminist leader and author.[5] As the Beijing Platform for Action states, "women's equal participation in political life plays a pivotal role in the general process of the advancement of women."[6]

Further, according to the Beijing Platform for Action "[w]ithout the active participation of women and the incorporation of women's perspective at all levels of decision-making, the goals of equality, development and peace cannot be achieved."[6] Therefore, Lombardo claims that women and men should be equally represented in any decision-making institution.[4] Charlesworth agrees and believes that every effort should be made to broaden women's participation at all levels of decision-making.[7]

Post-conflict peace-building (PCPB)

An area of policy and decision making that will particularly benefit from gender mainstreaming is post-conflict peace-building, also known as PCPB. Various feminist research has concluded that men and women experience violent conflict differently and moreover, the current policies surrounding PCPB are insufficient in addressing the disadvantaged position of women in male-dominated power structures that are further reinforced by peace-building efforts, both from the domestic and international communities. Gender mainstreaming in PCPB would emphasize the importance of gendered considerations of particular issues that disproportionally affect women in post-conflict settings. This would mean that policy reflected an acknowledgment of the many instances of wartime sexualized violence perpetrated on women, among other issues that (primarily) women face during conflict. A major focus of the effort towards gender mainstreaming in post-conflict peace-building policy is to lessen the international community's inclination towards building a return to 'normal' for the post-conflict region. Much of feminist research has found that returning to 'normal' is of little comfort for women, who were burdened by the patriarchal systems that were in place before conflict broke out. As Handrahan[8] notes, the international community involved in much of PCPB "tolerates high levels of violence against women in their own societies." Policy that prioritized gender in its applications and goals would seek to build a society where women are better off than they were before conflict broke out.[8]

Shifts in institutional culture

Gender mainstreaming can be seen as a process of organizational change.[9] Gender mainstreaming must be institutionalized through concrete steps, mechanisms, and processes in all parts of the organization.[7] According to Lombardo, this change involves three aspects: policy process, policy mechanisms; and policy actors. She explains as follows:

"1. A shift in policy process means that the process "is reorganized so that ordinary actors know how to incorporate a gender perspective" or that gender expertise is included "as normal requirement for policy-makers" (Council of Europe 1998, 165[10]).

2. A shift in policy mechanism involves (a) the adoption of horizontal cooperation on gender issues across all policy areas, levels, and departments; and (b) the use of appropriate policy tools and techniques to integrate the gender variable in all policies and to monitor and evaluate all policies from a gender perspective.

3. The range of policy actors participating in the policy-making process is broadened to include, apart from policy-makers and civil servants, gender experts and civil society."[11]

Gender budgeting

Gender budgeting encompasses activities and initiatives aiming at the preparation of budgets or the analysis of policies and budgets from a gender perspective. It can also be referred to as gender-sensitive budgeting or gender-responsive budgeting. Gender budgeting does not aim at creating separate budgets for women, or only increasing spending on women’s programmes. It is rather concerned with addressing budgetary gender inequality concerns, as for instance, how gender hierarchies influence budgets, and gender-based unpaid or low paid work.[12]

Examples

As Jacqui True says, "[m]ainstreaming was established as a global strategy for achieving gender equality, and in turn for achieving sustainable economic development in the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action ratified by all United Nations member states. It is now incumbent upon nation-states and international organizations to carry out gender mainstreaming. As such, mainstreaming has achieved widespread endorsement by individual governments, regional supra-state bodies."[13] What follows is a non-exhaustive list of examples of these endorsements.

Nicaragua

The election of 1990 in Nicaragua brought to office the first female president in the Americas. On April 25, 1990, Violeta Chamorro became the first and only woman to defeat a male incumbent presentment.[14] This helped to change and mobilize mainstream gender structure within Nicaragua. In 1993 the existing outdated Sandinista Women's organization, the Nicaraguan Institute for Research on Women, was revitalized and renamed by the Chamorro government as the Nicaraguan Institute for Woman (INIM). This was to encourage the involvement of Nicaraguan women in the country's economic, social, cultural, and political development and to promote a change in mainstream gender constructs.[15] More specifically, the INIM aims to institute in all sectors a system of gender-focus indicators and to achieve equal opportunity in all State body programming.[16] In 1994, the INIM with 62 women's groups held discussions to mobilize their initiatives and form a bill of action. The discussions formed a plan, which defined patriarchy, sexism, and gender stereotypes to reduce inequality in education, employment, and violence.[15]

Although the Nicaraguan Institute for Women claimed to "have been instrumental in mainstreaming gender equality principles and strategies into agriculture, socio-economic development, higher education, and sexual and domestic violence prevention," the United Nations General Assembly on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women in 2007 raised several concerns, such as the backlog of important women's rights legislation in the country, the lack of studies on abortion, and the available funds of the Institute.[16]

Taiwan

Under the influence of the UN community, the usage of the term increased in Taiwan since 2000. Local feminist organizations have different views on gender mainstreaming. Some groups considered that the Commission on Women Rights Promotion under Executive Yuan should be expanded, while other groups, including the National Alliance of Taiwan Women's Associations, considered that gender mainstreaming is not promotion of women's rights but an assessment of all policies and requires a specific organization.[17]

Foundation of Women's Rights Promotion and Development (FWRPD) has conducted research on gender mainstreaming and gender equality development, produced gender resources kits for training and education, networked women groups and entrepreneurs, participated in international exchange in UN, APEC gender related meetings.[18]

Vienna, Austria

In late 2006, the city council of Vienna, capital of Austria, ordered several gender mainstreaming measures for public facilities and areas. Pictograms and information display charts will feature a male silhouette holding a baby in his arms to advise passengers on the underground railway to offer seating to parents with children.[19][20]

Emergency escape paths will be marked by a square table featuring a long-haired lady running in her high heel boots.[21]

A pilot kindergarten now uses a flexible open play area instead of separate "playing corners" with toy cars and LEGO for boys or dolls and faux fireplaces for girls.[22] In some pilot kindergartens, traditional fairy tales were rewritten, and a songbook featuring active women was created.[23]

Infrastructure changes have included "unisex" playgrounds for city parks, which encourage young boys and girls to mix and redesigned streetlights to make parks and sidewalks safer for late night joggers.[24]

UN Peacekeeping Operations

The United Nations began acknowledging the importance of gender mainstreaming as a tool towards achieving gender equality in the mid-1990s, as outlined in the Beijing Platform for Action and the Report from the Secretary General to the Economic and Social Council.[25][26]

In October 2000, the UN Security Council passed Resolution 1325,[27] a resolution that called for an enhanced female participation in the prevention, management and resolution of conflict.[28] Peacekeeping was an area of particular concern, and the Security Council recognized "the urgent need to mainstream a gender perspective into peacekeeping operations."[29] The Council requested "the Secretary-General, where appropriate, to include in his reporting to the Security Council, progress on gender mainstreaming throughout peacekeeping missions and all other aspects relating to women and girls."[30] As a result, there has been an increase in female peacekeeping personnel. As of 2012, in peacekeeping operations and special political missions, 29 percent of international and 17 percent of national staff were women. If we compare these figures with the 48 percent representation of women at the UN Headquarters, the participation of women in the United Nations Peacekeeping operations still faces challenges.[31]

European Union

The equality policy of the European Union consists of three pillars: (1) anti-discrimination, (2) affirmative action policies, and (3) gender mainstreaming.[32][33]: 28 

In the 1990s the European Union officially put gender mainstreaming on their agenda, "fixing the principle in treaty articles, action programs and communications, and setting up institutional bodies and mechanisms to promote the incorporation of a gender perspective into policymaking."[34] More specifically, gender mainstreaming was introduced in 1991 in the European Community as an element of the Third Action Programme on Equal Opportunities.[35] Currently, the legal basis for gender mainstreaming in European law is Article 8 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). This article states the following: "In all its activities, the Union shall aim to eliminate inequalities, and to promote equality, between men and women".

What follows is a non-exhaustive overview of current gender governance initiatives in the European Union that encourages gender mainstreaming.

For instance, since 1997 gender mainstreaming has been part of the European Employment Strategy, a concept launched by the European Council. The European Employment Strategy requires governments to adopt an approach that complies with the concept of gender mainstreaming, while deciding on employment policies.[36][37] Some concrete examples: new equal opportunities acts requiring mainstreaming (e.g., in France social partners are required to promote gender equality through collective bargaining); mainstreaming or gender assessment in individual ministries or areas of public services (e.g., in Finland and Sweden); and gender assessment of all new pieces of legislation.[38] According to Jill Rubery, a Professor of comparative employment system at Manchester School of Management, so far "the experience has been mixed: though the argument that increasing women's employment is critical to the achievement of Europe's aspirations for a higher employment rate has been widely accepted, there is a much weaker and more fragile commitment to improving the quality of work available to women."[36]

A second example is the Transnational Women's Networks.[39] As such we can cite the European Women's Lobby (EWL) as an important women's organization at EU level that was created in 1990. About 2,500 NGOs of 30 European countries are part of the EWL.[39][33]: 51  The European Women's Lobby encourages "coordination of women's civic groups on the EU stages."[39] The EWL lobbied for increasing the involvement of women's organizations in the process of gender governance.[33]: 51  In addition the EWL has been pushing for "an EU Strategy to promote, implement and facilitate civil society and specifically women's organizations input into the European debate as an essential part of the European social model."[40] Another important organization is Women in Development Europe (WIDE). This network, created in 1985, consists of NGOs, women's organizations, gender experts, and activists active in development. Women in Development Europe monitors European economic and developmental policies and practices[39][33]: 52  and is involved at many phases in policy-making activities as knowledge source.[33]: 52 

Another gender governance actor is the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE), established in May 2007. The EIGE has as mandate to "provide expertise, improve knowledge and raise visibility of equality between men and women".[33]: 53 

Obviously there are many more initiatives on EU level, to name a few: Advisory Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men,[33]: 57  High Level Group on Gender Mainstreaming,[33]: 58  Inter-Service Group on Gender Equality,[33] Informal Group of Experts on Gender Equality in Development Cooperation,[33]: 61  Women in Europe for our Common Future.[39]

Criticism

Ineffective results

Maria Stratigaki, Assistant Professor at the Department of Social Policy of Panteion University, claims that the transformative effect of gender mainstreaming was minimal and its application has led to contradictory results. It opened important opportunities for specific policies in new policy areas, whereas in some other it diluted positive action. She also claims that, at least as of 2003, gender mainstreaming has failed to affect core policy areas or radically transform policy processes within the European Institutions.[41]

Some say that gender mainstreaming has not increased women's participation in decision making. As Charlesworth notes, "[i]n the most readily measurable area, the United Nations' employment of women in professional and managerial posts, progress has been glacial. In 2004, women held 37.4 percent of these positions. The annual growth rate toward the 50 percent target [...] is predicted to be 0.4 percent. On top of this slow growth, there is a considerable hierarchy based on sex. On June 30, 2004, women held 83.3 percent of positions at the lowest professional level, P-1, but just 16.7 percent at the highest staff level, Under-Secretary-General."[7] In a similar vein, concerning the European Union, Lombardo reports that as of 2003 women represented only 20 percent of the representatives of the head of state or government the member states, 10 percent of the representatives of national parliaments, 31.25 percent of the representatives of the European Parliament and so forth.[42]

True claims that mainstreaming gender does not end in simply increasing the number of women within a specific institution. It is about changing social consciousness, so that the effects of a policy for both women and men are truly analyzed before they are implemented. While it is necessary for feminists to engage with mainstream institutions, the ability of gender mainstreaming to deconstruct the embedded masculinization of institutions varies depending on the characteristics of the policy, the political nature of the institution, and the depth of the institution's consultation with civil society and other members of the women's rights movement.[43] The danger of gender mainstreaming is that large compromises can be made for small gains and can lead to what feminist and sociology professor Gail Dines calls "trickle-down feminism"—i.e., "working to increase the ranks of women in elite jobs without a strategy for wider economic and social change represents a kind of "trickle-down feminism."[44]

Poor implementation

Charlesworth remarks that "[a]lthough it has not been difficult to encourage the adoption of the vocabulary of mainstreaming, there is little evidence of monitoring or follow-up. A consistent problem for all the organizations that adopted gender mainstreaming is the translation of the commitment into action."[7] She continues: "A review of gender mainstreaming policies implemented under the United Nations Development Programme, World Bank, and ILO found inadequate budgeting for the gender components of projects, insufficient development of analytical skills, poor supervision of the implementation of gender components and a general lack of political commitment both within the organization and at the country level."[7]

Hindering progress

Stratigaki claims that positive action was sidelined after the launch of gender mainstreaming as a result of the specific way gender mainstreaming was used by the opponents of gender equality. According to Stratigaki, "[a]lmost all analyses of [gender mainstreaming] agree that it is a strategy which complements but does not replace previous gender specific equality policies like equal treatment legislation and positive action." However, she states too that "in a hostile gender equality policy environments (i.e. patriarchal structures of institutional organisations or the prevalence of policy objectives contrary to gender equality etc.), [gender mainstreaming] may be conceived and applied as an alternative to positive action and used to downplay the final overall objective of gender equality.[41]

True is of the opinion that in practice, attempts to mainstream gender within international institutions have led to the marginalization and increasing invisibility of gender in each policy area. Anne-Marie Goetz, a Clinical Professor at NYU, and Joanne Sandler, a consultant for gender equality and organizational development, argue that ironically, mainstreaming gender runs the risk of becoming everyone's responsibility, yet nobody's at the same time.[45] Gender mainstreaming can allow those in power who are not genuinely interested in the women's movement to adopt the language of women's rights, a reflection of power politics that becomes more of a tool used to legitimize the actions of governments. Gender mainstreaming then becomes more about advising governments than advancing gender equality.[46]

Other criticism

As differences are silenced, the kind of feminism that is likely to be mainstreamed could be a western or middle class brand of feminism. When mainstreaming decisions within international organizations are made by elites can undermine the input of local women's groups.[47]: 72 

When gender mainstreaming policies are drafted without consulting sections of the women's movement (i.e., women's rights civil society groups), they lack ground level-expertise. Policy decisions related to gender that are made without consulting sections of the women's movement do not demonstrate a clear political willingness to addressing gender inequality. When institutions reach out to the women's rights movement, it demonstrates transparency, inclusiveness, accountability and the implementation process is more likely to be monitored with diligence.[48] For example, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), as an attempt at mainstreaming gender into development, were formed with minimal consultation with women's groups. The MDGs have led to a considerable amount of theoretically discourse about the goals but less analysis about how they will be implemented.[47]: 78 

True highlights the tendency for gender mainstreaming to become a guise under which women are used as economic subjects.[2] Women are framed in terms of advancing economic growth, as opposed to the inherent normative ideal for women and men to hold equal positions of power in society.

See also

References

  1. ^ United Nations. "Report of the Economic and Social Council for 1997". A/52/3.18 September 1997.
  2. ^ a b c d e Shepard, Laura J. (2015). Gender Matters in Global Politics: A Feminist Introduction to International Relations. New York: Routledge.
  3. ^ a b True, Jacqui, Mainstreaming Gender in Global Public Policy, International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2010, 371
  4. ^ a b c Lombardo, E., (2005) "Integrating or Setting the Agenda? Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution-Making Process", Social Politics 12(3): 417
  5. ^ Lombardo, E., (2005) "Integrating or Setting the Agenda? Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution-Making Process", Social Politics 12(3): 417
  6. ^ a b Beijing Platform for Action, G. 181
  7. ^ a b c d e Charlesworth, H., (2005) "Not waving but Drowning: Gender Mainstreaming and Human Rights in the United Nations", 18 Harvard Human Rights Journal 1.
  8. ^ a b Handrahan, Lori (2004). "Conflict, gender, ethnicity and post-conflict reconstruction". Security Dialogue. 35 (4): 429–445. doi:10.1177/0967010604049521. S2CID 145460388.
  9. ^ Bibbings, Sharleene May (2012). The politics of mainstreaming in critical perspective. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Pub. ISBN 9781443835121.
  10. ^ Council of Europe. 1998. Gender Mainstreaming: Conceptual Framework, Methodology and Presentation of Good Practices: Final Report of Activities of the Group of Specialists on Mainstreaming. EG-S-MS. Strasbourg: Council of Europe
  11. ^ Lombardo, E., (2005) "Integrating or Setting the Agenda? Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution-Making Process", Social Politics 12(3): 417-18
  12. ^ UNESCO (2015). A Guide for Gender Equality in Teacher Education Policy and Practices (PDF). Paris, UNESCO. pp. 72–75. ISBN 978-92-3-100069-0.
  13. ^ True, Jacqui, Mainstreaming Gender in Global Public Policy, International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2010, 369
  14. ^ Prevost, G. (1996). "'The Nicaraguan Revolution: Six Years After The Sandinista Electoral Defeat'". Third World Quarterly. 17 (2): 307–327. doi:10.1080/01436599650035707. S2CID 144886074.
  15. ^ a b Isbester, Katherine (2001). Still Fighting: The Nicaraguan Women's movement, 1977-2000. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh press.
  16. ^ a b General Assembly, United Nations. "Nicaraguan Institute for women Instrumental in Mainstream Gender Equality Strategies, Anti-Discrimination".
  17. ^ Lin, Fang-Mei. "性別主流化在台灣:從國際發展到在地化實踐". 第一屆性別研究與公共政策學術研討會, Taipei:Shih Hsin University. April 13, 2005.
  18. ^ "Taiwan's Women's Organizations" (PDF). APEC Women Leaders Network. APEC Women Leaders Network. Retrieved 2015-11-15.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ Prabha Khosla, Vienna, Austria – A Model City for Gender Mainstreaming
  20. ^ Bauer, Ursula. Mainstreaming in Vienna. How the Gender Perspective Can Raise the Quality of Life in a Big City, Kvinder, Køn & Forskning 70 nr. 2-4, 2009, 66
  21. ^ Bell, Bethany (2007-01-23). "Gender Change for Vienna Signs". BBC News. Retrieved 2015-07-16.
  22. ^ "Kindergartens - ways to implement gender mainstreaming". wien.at. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  23. ^ Viktória, Soós. "How Is Vienna 'Gender Mainstreaming'?" (PDF). Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  24. ^ Foran, Claire (2013-09-16). "How to Design a City for Women". The Atlantic - Cities. Retrieved 2013-09-19.
  25. ^ United Nations, Fourth World Conference on Women. "Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action" (PDF). Retrieved September 26, 2013.
  26. ^ United Nations General Assembly. . Archived from the original on 2013-10-01.
  27. ^ "United Nations Official Document". www.un.org.
  28. ^ True, Jacqui, Mainstreaming Gender in Global Public Policy, International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2010, 373
  29. ^ Resolution 1325, 2
  30. ^ Resolution 1325, 4
  31. ^ United Nations. "Women in Peacekeeping". Retrieved September 26, 2013.
  32. ^ Lang, S., 2009, Assessing Advocacy: European Transnational Women's Networks and Gender Mainstreaming, 9
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Calvo, D. (2013). What is the problem of gender? Mainstreaming gender in migration and development policies in the European Union (PDF) (Doctoral Dissertation). Gothenburg: Department of Sociology and Work Science.
  34. ^ Lang, S., 2009, Assessing Advocacy: European Transnational Women's Networks and Gender Mainstreaming, 2
  35. ^ Pollack, Mark A. and Hafner-Burton, Emilie. 2000. Gender Mainstreaming in the European Union, Harvard Jean Monnet Working Paper 2/000, 9
  36. ^ a b Rubery, Jill, 2005, Reflections on Gender Mainstreaming: An Example of Feminist Economics in Action?, Feminist Economics 11(3), November 2005, 1
  37. ^ Woodward, Alison E. 2008. Too late for gender mainstreaming? Taking stock in Brussels Journal of European Social Policy (2008) 18 (3): 4
  38. ^ Rubery, Jill, 2005, Reflections on Gender Mainstreaming: An Example of Feminist Economics in Action?, Feminist Economics 11(3), November 2005, 9-10
  39. ^ a b c d e Lang, S., 2009, Assessing Advocacy: European Transnational Women's Networks and Gender Mainstreaming, 12
  40. ^ European Women's Lobby. 2005a. Contribution from the European Women's Lobby to the Green Paper on an EU Approach to Managing Economic Migration, COM(2005)811 final, 6
  41. ^ a b Stratigaki, M., (2005) "Gender Mainstreaming vs Positive Action. An Ongoing Conflict in EU Gender Equality Policy", European Journal of Women's Studies 12 (2): 165-186.
  42. ^ Lombardo, E., (2005) "Integrating or Setting the Agenda? Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution-Making Process", Social Politics 12(3): 422
  43. ^ "True, J. (2010) "Mainstreaming Gender in International Relations". Gender Matters in Global Politics (New York: Routledge) L.J. Shepherd (Ed.) 194"
  44. ^ "'Having it all' looks very different for women stuck in low-paid jobs | Gail Dines | Comment is free". theguardian.com. 2014-04-23. Retrieved 2014-06-05.
  45. ^ True, Jacqui (2010). Laura J. Shepherd, ed. Gender Mainstreaming in International Institutions. New York: Routledge. p. 196
  46. ^ True, Jacqui (2010). Laura J. Shepherd, ed. Mainstreaming Gender in International Institutions. New York: Routledge. p. 198
  47. ^ a b Palmary, I.; Nunez, L. (2009). "The Orthodoxy of Gender Mainstreaming: Reflecting on Gender Mainstreaming as Strategy for Accomplishing the Millennium Development Goals". Journal of Health Management. 11 (65): 65–78. doi:10.1177/097206340901100105. S2CID 56810635.
  48. ^ True, Jacqui (2010). Laura J. Shepherd, ed. Mainstreaming Gender in International Institutions. New York: Routledge. p. 192.

External links

  • WomenWatch, the United Nations Internet Gateway on Gender Equality and Empowerment of Women
  • , the United Nations Development Programme's gateway on women's empowerment and gender equality
  • Active work for Gender Equality[permanent dead link], SALAR's booklet "Active work for Gender Equality – a challenge for municipalities and county councils""
  • EIGE, the European Institute for Gender Equality official website
  • The European Community of Practice on Gender Mainstreaming, The European Commission's learning network on Gender Mainstreaming within the European Social Fund (ESF)""
  • Libguide on Gender Regional Agenda

gender, mainstreaming, public, policy, concept, assessing, implications, people, different, genders, planned, policy, action, including, legislation, programmes, mainstreaming, offers, pluralistic, approach, that, values, diversity, among, people, different, g. Gender mainstreaming is the public policy concept of assessing the implications for people of different genders of a planned policy action including legislation and programmes Mainstreaming offers a pluralistic approach that values the diversity among people of different genders The concept of gender mainstreaming was first proposed at the 1985 Third World Conference on Women and has subsequently been pushed in the United Nations development community The idea was formally featured in 1995 at the Fourth World Conference on Women and was cited in the document that resulted from the conference the Beijing Platform for Action Contents 1 Definition 2 Principles 2 1 Prioritizing gender equality 2 2 Incorporating gender into politics and decision making 2 2 1 Post conflict peace building PCPB 2 3 Shifts in institutional culture 3 Gender budgeting 4 Examples 4 1 Nicaragua 4 2 Taiwan 4 3 Vienna Austria 4 4 UN Peacekeeping Operations 4 5 European Union 5 Criticism 5 1 Ineffective results 5 2 Poor implementation 5 3 Hindering progress 5 4 Other criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDefinition EditMost definitions of gender mainstreaming conform to the UN Economic and Social Council formally defined concept Mainstreaming a gender perspective is the process of assessing the implications for women and men of any planned action including legislation policies or programmes in all areas and at all levels It is a strategy for making women s as well as men s concerns and experiences an integral dimension of the design implementation monitoring and evaluation of policies and programmes in all political economic and societal spheres so that women and men benefit equally and inequality is not perpetuated The ultimate goal is to achieve gender equality 1 There are different approaches to gender mainstreaming Institutional perspective The ways in which specific organizations adopt and implement mainstreaming policies This will often involve an analysis of how national politics intersects with international norms and practices 2 Discursive perspective Queries the ways in which mainstreaming reproduces power relations through language and issue framing This approach will often involve looking at documents resolutions and peace agreements to see how they reproduce the narratives of gender in a political context 2 These approaches are not necessarily competing and can be seen as complementary Gender Mainstreaming Seminar 2015 The ways in which approaches are used however can also reflect differing feminist theories For example liberal feminism is strongly invoked by mainstreaming through the binary approach of gender in strict relation to the public sphere of policymaking Poststructuralist feminism can be seen in mainstreaming thought which seeks to displace gender difference as the sole axis of difference and to highlight the diversity of policy its ramifications 2 Principles Edit Col Shafiqa Quraishi Director of the Afghan National Police Gender Mainstreaming Unit speaks at an ANP female recruiting conference covered how to recruit and train the additional 5 000 women that Afghan President Hamid Karzai has mandated be added to the police force by 2014 Prioritizing gender equality Edit Gender mainstreaming tries among others to ascertain a gender equality perspective across all policy areas 3 According to Jacqui True a Professor of politics and international relations e very policy or piece of legislation should be evaluated from the perspective of whether or not it reduces or increases gender inequalities 3 This concept of gender equality is not limited to formal equality it includes as well equality de facto which is a more holistic approach to gender policy in order to tackle the interconnected causes that create an unequal relation between the sexes in all areas of life work politics sexuality culture and violence 4 Lombardo notes that t here should be evidence that gender equality objective and policies of special concern for women for example social policy have been prioritized in the organization among competing objectives in terms of financial and human resources type of measures adopted voting systems used and so forth 4 Incorporating gender into politics and decision making Edit Puechguirbal takes a discursive approach to argue that in order to successfully mainstream a gendered perspective in politics language needs to be reevaluated and used to change the parameters of how women are perceived Historically documents concerning international agreements peacekeeping arrangements and legal resolutions have perpetuated stereotypes that disempower women This can be seen through the use of language even as simply as in the UN Disarmament Demobilization and Reintegration program s DDR motto One man on weapon 2 Reference of gender issues should be found in all policy areas There must be evidence that the mainstream political agenda has been reoriented by rethinking and rearticulating policy ends and means from a gender perspective Lombardo says referencing Rounaq Jahan a political scientists feminist leader and author 5 As the Beijing Platform for Action states women s equal participation in political life plays a pivotal role in the general process of the advancement of women 6 Further according to the Beijing Platform for Action w ithout the active participation of women and the incorporation of women s perspective at all levels of decision making the goals of equality development and peace cannot be achieved 6 Therefore Lombardo claims that women and men should be equally represented in any decision making institution 4 Charlesworth agrees and believes that every effort should be made to broaden women s participation at all levels of decision making 7 Post conflict peace building PCPB Edit An area of policy and decision making that will particularly benefit from gender mainstreaming is post conflict peace building also known as PCPB Various feminist research has concluded that men and women experience violent conflict differently and moreover the current policies surrounding PCPB are insufficient in addressing the disadvantaged position of women in male dominated power structures that are further reinforced by peace building efforts both from the domestic and international communities Gender mainstreaming in PCPB would emphasize the importance of gendered considerations of particular issues that disproportionally affect women in post conflict settings This would mean that policy reflected an acknowledgment of the many instances of wartime sexualized violence perpetrated on women among other issues that primarily women face during conflict A major focus of the effort towards gender mainstreaming in post conflict peace building policy is to lessen the international community s inclination towards building a return to normal for the post conflict region Much of feminist research has found that returning to normal is of little comfort for women who were burdened by the patriarchal systems that were in place before conflict broke out As Handrahan 8 notes the international community involved in much of PCPB tolerates high levels of violence against women in their own societies Policy that prioritized gender in its applications and goals would seek to build a society where women are better off than they were before conflict broke out 8 Shifts in institutional culture Edit Gender mainstreaming can be seen as a process of organizational change 9 Gender mainstreaming must be institutionalized through concrete steps mechanisms and processes in all parts of the organization 7 According to Lombardo this change involves three aspects policy process policy mechanisms and policy actors She explains as follows 1 A shift in policy process means that the process is reorganized so that ordinary actors know how to incorporate a gender perspective or that gender expertise is included as normal requirement for policy makers Council of Europe 1998 165 10 2 A shift in policy mechanism involves a the adoption of horizontal cooperation on gender issues across all policy areas levels and departments and b the use of appropriate policy tools and techniques to integrate the gender variable in all policies and to monitor and evaluate all policies from a gender perspective 3 The range of policy actors participating in the policy making process is broadened to include apart from policy makers and civil servants gender experts and civil society 11 Gender budgeting EditMain article Gender budgeting Gender budgeting encompasses activities and initiatives aiming at the preparation of budgets or the analysis of policies and budgets from a gender perspective It can also be referred to as gender sensitive budgeting or gender responsive budgeting Gender budgeting does not aim at creating separate budgets for women or only increasing spending on women s programmes It is rather concerned with addressing budgetary gender inequality concerns as for instance how gender hierarchies influence budgets and gender based unpaid or low paid work 12 Examples EditAs Jacqui True says m ainstreaming was established as a global strategy for achieving gender equality and in turn for achieving sustainable economic development in the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action ratified by all United Nations member states It is now incumbent upon nation states and international organizations to carry out gender mainstreaming As such mainstreaming has achieved widespread endorsement by individual governments regional supra state bodies 13 What follows is a non exhaustive list of examples of these endorsements Nicaragua Edit The election of 1990 in Nicaragua brought to office the first female president in the Americas On April 25 1990 Violeta Chamorro became the first and only woman to defeat a male incumbent presentment 14 This helped to change and mobilize mainstream gender structure within Nicaragua In 1993 the existing outdated Sandinista Women s organization the Nicaraguan Institute for Research on Women was revitalized and renamed by the Chamorro government as the Nicaraguan Institute for Woman INIM This was to encourage the involvement of Nicaraguan women in the country s economic social cultural and political development and to promote a change in mainstream gender constructs 15 More specifically the INIM aims to institute in all sectors a system of gender focus indicators and to achieve equal opportunity in all State body programming 16 In 1994 the INIM with 62 women s groups held discussions to mobilize their initiatives and form a bill of action The discussions formed a plan which defined patriarchy sexism and gender stereotypes to reduce inequality in education employment and violence 15 Although the Nicaraguan Institute for Women claimed to have been instrumental in mainstreaming gender equality principles and strategies into agriculture socio economic development higher education and sexual and domestic violence prevention the United Nations General Assembly on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women in 2007 raised several concerns such as the backlog of important women s rights legislation in the country the lack of studies on abortion and the available funds of the Institute 16 Taiwan Edit Under the influence of the UN community the usage of the term increased in Taiwan since 2000 Local feminist organizations have different views on gender mainstreaming Some groups considered that the Commission on Women Rights Promotion under Executive Yuan should be expanded while other groups including the National Alliance of Taiwan Women s Associations considered that gender mainstreaming is not promotion of women s rights but an assessment of all policies and requires a specific organization 17 Foundation of Women s Rights Promotion and Development FWRPD has conducted research on gender mainstreaming and gender equality development produced gender resources kits for training and education networked women groups and entrepreneurs participated in international exchange in UN APEC gender related meetings 18 Vienna Austria Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In late 2006 the city council of Vienna capital of Austria ordered several gender mainstreaming measures for public facilities and areas Pictograms and information display charts will feature a male silhouette holding a baby in his arms to advise passengers on the underground railway to offer seating to parents with children 19 20 Emergency escape paths will be marked by a square table featuring a long haired lady running in her high heel boots 21 A pilot kindergarten now uses a flexible open play area instead of separate playing corners with toy cars and LEGO for boys or dolls and faux fireplaces for girls 22 In some pilot kindergartens traditional fairy tales were rewritten and a songbook featuring active women was created 23 Infrastructure changes have included unisex playgrounds for city parks which encourage young boys and girls to mix and redesigned streetlights to make parks and sidewalks safer for late night joggers 24 UN Peacekeeping Operations Edit The United Nations began acknowledging the importance of gender mainstreaming as a tool towards achieving gender equality in the mid 1990s as outlined in the Beijing Platform for Action and the Report from the Secretary General to the Economic and Social Council 25 26 In October 2000 the UN Security Council passed Resolution 1325 27 a resolution that called for an enhanced female participation in the prevention management and resolution of conflict 28 Peacekeeping was an area of particular concern and the Security Council recognized the urgent need to mainstream a gender perspective into peacekeeping operations 29 The Council requested the Secretary General where appropriate to include in his reporting to the Security Council progress on gender mainstreaming throughout peacekeeping missions and all other aspects relating to women and girls 30 As a result there has been an increase in female peacekeeping personnel As of 2012 in peacekeeping operations and special political missions 29 percent of international and 17 percent of national staff were women If we compare these figures with the 48 percent representation of women at the UN Headquarters the participation of women in the United Nations Peacekeeping operations still faces challenges 31 European Union Edit The equality policy of the European Union consists of three pillars 1 anti discrimination 2 affirmative action policies and 3 gender mainstreaming 32 33 28 In the 1990s the European Union officially put gender mainstreaming on their agenda fixing the principle in treaty articles action programs and communications and setting up institutional bodies and mechanisms to promote the incorporation of a gender perspective into policymaking 34 More specifically gender mainstreaming was introduced in 1991 in the European Community as an element of the Third Action Programme on Equal Opportunities 35 Currently the legal basis for gender mainstreaming in European law is Article 8 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union TFEU This article states the following In all its activities the Union shall aim to eliminate inequalities and to promote equality between men and women What follows is a non exhaustive overview of current gender governance initiatives in the European Union that encourages gender mainstreaming For instance since 1997 gender mainstreaming has been part of the European Employment Strategy a concept launched by the European Council The European Employment Strategy requires governments to adopt an approach that complies with the concept of gender mainstreaming while deciding on employment policies 36 37 Some concrete examples new equal opportunities acts requiring mainstreaming e g in France social partners are required to promote gender equality through collective bargaining mainstreaming or gender assessment in individual ministries or areas of public services e g in Finland and Sweden and gender assessment of all new pieces of legislation 38 According to Jill Rubery a Professor of comparative employment system at Manchester School of Management so far the experience has been mixed though the argument that increasing women s employment is critical to the achievement of Europe s aspirations for a higher employment rate has been widely accepted there is a much weaker and more fragile commitment to improving the quality of work available to women 36 A second example is the Transnational Women s Networks 39 As such we can cite the European Women s Lobby EWL as an important women s organization at EU level that was created in 1990 About 2 500 NGOs of 30 European countries are part of the EWL 39 33 51 The European Women s Lobby encourages coordination of women s civic groups on the EU stages 39 The EWL lobbied for increasing the involvement of women s organizations in the process of gender governance 33 51 In addition the EWL has been pushing for an EU Strategy to promote implement and facilitate civil society and specifically women s organizations input into the European debate as an essential part of the European social model 40 Another important organization is Women in Development Europe WIDE This network created in 1985 consists of NGOs women s organizations gender experts and activists active in development Women in Development Europe monitors European economic and developmental policies and practices 39 33 52 and is involved at many phases in policy making activities as knowledge source 33 52 Another gender governance actor is the European Institute for Gender Equality EIGE established in May 2007 The EIGE has as mandate to provide expertise improve knowledge and raise visibility of equality between men and women 33 53 Obviously there are many more initiatives on EU level to name a few Advisory Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men 33 57 High Level Group on Gender Mainstreaming 33 58 Inter Service Group on Gender Equality 33 Informal Group of Experts on Gender Equality in Development Cooperation 33 61 Women in Europe for our Common Future 39 Criticism EditIneffective results Edit Maria Stratigaki Assistant Professor at the Department of Social Policy of Panteion University claims that the transformative effect of gender mainstreaming was minimal and its application has led to contradictory results It opened important opportunities for specific policies in new policy areas whereas in some other it diluted positive action She also claims that at least as of 2003 gender mainstreaming has failed to affect core policy areas or radically transform policy processes within the European Institutions 41 Some say that gender mainstreaming has not increased women s participation in decision making As Charlesworth notes i n the most readily measurable area the United Nations employment of women in professional and managerial posts progress has been glacial In 2004 women held 37 4 percent of these positions The annual growth rate toward the 50 percent target is predicted to be 0 4 percent On top of this slow growth there is a considerable hierarchy based on sex On June 30 2004 women held 83 3 percent of positions at the lowest professional level P 1 but just 16 7 percent at the highest staff level Under Secretary General 7 In a similar vein concerning the European Union Lombardo reports that as of 2003 women represented only 20 percent of the representatives of the head of state or government the member states 10 percent of the representatives of national parliaments 31 25 percent of the representatives of the European Parliament and so forth 42 True claims that mainstreaming gender does not end in simply increasing the number of women within a specific institution It is about changing social consciousness so that the effects of a policy for both women and men are truly analyzed before they are implemented While it is necessary for feminists to engage with mainstream institutions the ability of gender mainstreaming to deconstruct the embedded masculinization of institutions varies depending on the characteristics of the policy the political nature of the institution and the depth of the institution s consultation with civil society and other members of the women s rights movement 43 The danger of gender mainstreaming is that large compromises can be made for small gains and can lead to what feminist and sociology professor Gail Dines calls trickle down feminism i e working to increase the ranks of women in elite jobs without a strategy for wider economic and social change represents a kind of trickle down feminism 44 Poor implementation Edit Charlesworth remarks that a lthough it has not been difficult to encourage the adoption of the vocabulary of mainstreaming there is little evidence of monitoring or follow up A consistent problem for all the organizations that adopted gender mainstreaming is the translation of the commitment into action 7 She continues A review of gender mainstreaming policies implemented under the United Nations Development Programme World Bank and ILO found inadequate budgeting for the gender components of projects insufficient development of analytical skills poor supervision of the implementation of gender components and a general lack of political commitment both within the organization and at the country level 7 Hindering progress Edit Stratigaki claims that positive action was sidelined after the launch of gender mainstreaming as a result of the specific way gender mainstreaming was used by the opponents of gender equality According to Stratigaki a lmost all analyses of gender mainstreaming agree that it is a strategy which complements but does not replace previous gender specific equality policies like equal treatment legislation and positive action However she states too that in a hostile gender equality policy environments i e patriarchal structures of institutional organisations or the prevalence of policy objectives contrary to gender equality etc gender mainstreaming may be conceived and applied as an alternative to positive action and used to downplay the final overall objective of gender equality 41 True is of the opinion that in practice attempts to mainstream gender within international institutions have led to the marginalization and increasing invisibility of gender in each policy area Anne Marie Goetz a Clinical Professor at NYU and Joanne Sandler a consultant for gender equality and organizational development argue that ironically mainstreaming gender runs the risk of becoming everyone s responsibility yet nobody s at the same time 45 Gender mainstreaming can allow those in power who are not genuinely interested in the women s movement to adopt the language of women s rights a reflection of power politics that becomes more of a tool used to legitimize the actions of governments Gender mainstreaming then becomes more about advising governments than advancing gender equality 46 Other criticism Edit As differences are silenced the kind of feminism that is likely to be mainstreamed could be a western or middle class brand of feminism When mainstreaming decisions within international organizations are made by elites can undermine the input of local women s groups 47 72 When gender mainstreaming policies are drafted without consulting sections of the women s movement i e women s rights civil society groups they lack ground level expertise Policy decisions related to gender that are made without consulting sections of the women s movement do not demonstrate a clear political willingness to addressing gender inequality When institutions reach out to the women s rights movement it demonstrates transparency inclusiveness accountability and the implementation process is more likely to be monitored with diligence 48 For example the Millennium Development Goals MDGs as an attempt at mainstreaming gender into development were formed with minimal consultation with women s groups The MDGs have led to a considerable amount of theoretically discourse about the goals but less analysis about how they will be implemented 47 78 True highlights the tendency for gender mainstreaming to become a guise under which women are used as economic subjects 2 Women are framed in terms of advancing economic growth as opposed to the inherent normative ideal for women and men to hold equal positions of power in society See also EditPortal Feminism Feminist economics Gender and security sector reform Gender Empowerment Measure Gender mainstreaming in teacher education policy Gender mainstreaming in mine action History of feminism Material feminism Special measures for gender equality in the United Nations Youth mainstreamingReferences Edit United Nations Report of the Economic and Social Council for 1997 A 52 3 18 September 1997 a b c d e Shepard Laura J 2015 Gender Matters in Global Politics A Feminist Introduction to International Relations New York Routledge a b True Jacqui Mainstreaming Gender in Global Public Policy International Feminist Journal of Politics 2010 371 a b c Lombardo E 2005 Integrating or Setting the Agenda Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution Making Process Social Politics 12 3 417 Lombardo E 2005 Integrating or Setting the Agenda Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution Making Process Social Politics 12 3 417 a b Beijing Platform for Action G 181 a b c d e Charlesworth H 2005 Not waving but Drowning Gender Mainstreaming and Human Rights in the United Nations 18 Harvard Human Rights Journal 1 a b Handrahan Lori 2004 Conflict gender ethnicity and post conflict reconstruction Security Dialogue 35 4 429 445 doi 10 1177 0967010604049521 S2CID 145460388 Bibbings Sharleene May 2012 The politics of mainstreaming in critical perspective Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Pub ISBN 9781443835121 Council of Europe 1998 Gender Mainstreaming Conceptual Framework Methodology and Presentation of Good Practices Final Report of Activities of the Group of Specialists on Mainstreaming EG S MS Strasbourg Council of Europe Lombardo E 2005 Integrating or Setting the Agenda Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution Making Process Social Politics 12 3 417 18 UNESCO 2015 A Guide for Gender Equality in Teacher Education Policy and Practices PDF Paris UNESCO pp 72 75 ISBN 978 92 3 100069 0 True Jacqui Mainstreaming Gender in Global Public Policy International Feminist Journal of Politics 2010 369 Prevost G 1996 The Nicaraguan Revolution Six Years After The Sandinista Electoral Defeat Third World Quarterly 17 2 307 327 doi 10 1080 01436599650035707 S2CID 144886074 a b Isbester Katherine 2001 Still Fighting The Nicaraguan Women s movement 1977 2000 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh press a b General Assembly United Nations Nicaraguan Institute for women Instrumental in Mainstream Gender Equality Strategies Anti Discrimination Lin Fang Mei 性別主流化在台灣 從國際發展到在地化實踐 第一屆性別研究與公共政策學術研討會 Taipei Shih Hsin University April 13 2005 Taiwan s Women s Organizations PDF APEC Women Leaders Network APEC Women Leaders Network Retrieved 2015 11 15 permanent dead link Prabha Khosla Vienna Austria A Model City for Gender Mainstreaming Bauer Ursula Mainstreaming in Vienna How the Gender Perspective Can Raise the Quality of Life in a Big City Kvinder Kon amp Forskning 70 nr 2 4 2009 66 Bell Bethany 2007 01 23 Gender Change for Vienna Signs BBC News Retrieved 2015 07 16 Kindergartens ways to implement gender mainstreaming wien at Retrieved 16 July 2015 Viktoria Soos How Is Vienna Gender Mainstreaming PDF Retrieved 16 July 2015 Foran Claire 2013 09 16 How to Design a City for Women The Atlantic Cities Retrieved 2013 09 19 United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action PDF Retrieved September 26 2013 United Nations General Assembly E 1997 66 Archived from the original on 2013 10 01 United Nations Official Document www un org True Jacqui Mainstreaming Gender in Global Public Policy International Feminist Journal of Politics 2010 373 Resolution 1325 2 Resolution 1325 4 United Nations Women in Peacekeeping Retrieved September 26 2013 Lang S 2009 Assessing Advocacy European Transnational Women s Networks and Gender Mainstreaming 9 a b c d e f g h i j Calvo D 2013 What is the problem of gender Mainstreaming gender in migration and development policies in the European Union PDF Doctoral Dissertation Gothenburg Department of Sociology and Work Science Lang S 2009 Assessing Advocacy European Transnational Women s Networks and Gender Mainstreaming 2 Pollack Mark A and Hafner Burton Emilie 2000 Gender Mainstreaming in the European Union Harvard Jean Monnet Working Paper 2 000 9 a b Rubery Jill 2005 Reflections on Gender Mainstreaming An Example of Feminist Economics in Action Feminist Economics 11 3 November 2005 1 Woodward Alison E 2008 Too late for gender mainstreaming Taking stock in Brussels Journal of European Social Policy 2008 18 3 4 Rubery Jill 2005 Reflections on Gender Mainstreaming An Example of Feminist Economics in Action Feminist Economics 11 3 November 2005 9 10 a b c d e Lang S 2009 Assessing Advocacy European Transnational Women s Networks and Gender Mainstreaming 12 European Women s Lobby 2005a Contribution from the European Women s Lobby to the Green Paper on an EU Approach to Managing Economic Migration COM 2005 811 final 6 a b Stratigaki M 2005 Gender Mainstreaming vs Positive Action An Ongoing Conflict in EU Gender Equality Policy European Journal of Women s Studies 12 2 165 186 Lombardo E 2005 Integrating or Setting the Agenda Gender Mainstreaming in the European Constitution Making Process Social Politics 12 3 422 True J 2010 Mainstreaming Gender in International Relations Gender Matters in Global Politics New York Routledge L J Shepherd Ed 194 Having it all looks very different for women stuck in low paid jobs Gail Dines Comment is free theguardian com 2014 04 23 Retrieved 2014 06 05 True Jacqui 2010 Laura J Shepherd ed Gender Mainstreaming in International Institutions New York Routledge p 196 True Jacqui 2010 Laura J Shepherd ed Mainstreaming Gender in International Institutions New York Routledge p 198 a b Palmary I Nunez L 2009 The Orthodoxy of Gender Mainstreaming Reflecting on Gender Mainstreaming as Strategy for Accomplishing the Millennium Development Goals Journal of Health Management 11 65 65 78 doi 10 1177 097206340901100105 S2CID 56810635 True Jacqui 2010 Laura J Shepherd ed Mainstreaming Gender in International Institutions New York Routledge p 192 External links EditWomenWatch the United Nations Internet Gateway on Gender Equality and Empowerment of Women Women s Empowerment the United Nations Development Programme s gateway on women s empowerment and gender equality Active work for Gender Equality permanent dead link SALAR s booklet Active work for Gender Equality a challenge for municipalities and county councils EIGE the European Institute for Gender Equality official website The European Community of Practice on Gender Mainstreaming The European Commission s learning network on Gender Mainstreaming within the European Social Fund ESF Libguide on Gender Regional Agenda Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gender mainstreaming amp oldid 1135644093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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