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Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

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Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender
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Page 1: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo

Coordinator – African Centre for Gender

Page 2: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Presentation Outline

• Looking back : Beijing reviews

• Outcome of the Beijing reviews

• Planning forward: Advancing gender equality and women’s empowerment in the Post 2015 development agenda

Page 3: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Beijing +20 Africa Review Website

http://www.uneca.org/beijing-plus-20/pages/documents

Page 4: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Banjul Declaration

• Economic empowerment of women through poverty reduction, employment creation, social protection and use of information and communications technology;

• Peace, security and development;

• Violence against women;

• Representation and participation of women in all areas of decision-making;

• Sexual and Reproductive Health and HIV/AIDS;

• Climate change and food security and

• Financing for gender equality

Page 5: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

20 years of implementation of the BPfA: Key Achievements:

1. Near-achievement of gender parity in primary education (North Africa’s gender parity index - 0.96; sub-Saharan Africa - 0.92);

2. Notable reduction in maternal mortality by 45 % with 1 country already achieving MDG 5 and remarkable progress witnessed in the continent as a whole;

3. Implementation of various policies, programmes and projects whose objective is to accelerate economic empowerment of women in a wide variety of sectors by all responding member states;

4. Representation and participation of women in key political decision-making positions (2 female Heads of State – H. E Ellen Sirleaf Johnson – Liberia & H. E. Catherine Samba – Panza – Central African Republic) ; AU Chairperson; more than 30 % national parliament representation in 12 countries; significant female representation in cabinet and local governance levels);

5. Public-private partnerships (PPPs) between governments, private sector, CSOs, development partners and research institutions to support and strengthen institutional mechanisms for the advancement of women by all responding member states;

6. Domestication of various global and regional legal frameworks aimed at promoting and protecting the human rights of women and girls (CEDAW, Maputo Protocol, Solemn Declaration, African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child);

Page 6: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

20 years of implementation of the BPfA: Key Challenges:1. Persistent gender inequality at secondary and tertiary education levels;

2. Perennial under-resourcing of national gender machineries – in terms of human and financial resources - curtailing their efficiency and effectiveness;

3. Reversals in the progress towards gender equality and women’s empowerment fueled by: the Ebola outbreak in West Africa; an increase in the number of African countries experiencing conflict and crises;

4. Persistent poverty with differential impact on women and children; with women having disproportionate access to food, health, education, training and opportunities for employment ;

5. Inadequate data and statistics disaggregated by age, sex, gender and other diversity leading to difficulties in the formulation and implementation of targeted policy and programmatic interventions;

6. Ineffective implementation of legal and normative instruments on women’s human rights; exacerbated by existence of plural legal frameworks – statutory/customary/religious.

Page 7: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Analysis of Beijing reviewsSuccess in enhancing the capabilities of women in the social sectors (education and health);

Progress in enhancing women’s voice and agency in political power and decision-making;

Page 8: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Analysis of Beijing reviews……ctdVery limited progress in pulling women out of

poverty due to inadequate and ineffective provision of economic opportunities

Page 9: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Planning Forward

Page 10: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Critical interventions

Page 11: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

African-driven and people-centered

transformative development model

Social Protection

Health

Trade&

Commerce

Innovation&

Technology

Labour & employ-

ment

Power & decision making

Education(All levels)

Extractive industries

Agriculture

Women, Girls,Youth

Page 12: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

economic opportunities for women:

BROAD-BASED INDUSTRIALIZATION IN HIGH-PRODUCTIVITY SECTORS e.g agriculture, mining

BROAD-BASED INDUSTRIALIZATION IN HIGH-PRODUCTIVITY SECTORS e.g agriculture, mining

Page 13: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Why inclusive broad-based industrialization?

Page 14: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Sample value-addition in mining (ASM): Where are women positioned?

Page 15: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Characteristics of Inclusive and transformative industrialization

Page 16: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Achieving “visible change” for women

Page 17: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Which way forward post 2015?

Page 18: Presented by Ms. Thokozile Ruzvidzo Coordinator – African Centre for Gender.

Key questions to ponder


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