Statistics CanadaStatistics Canada Statistique CanadaStatistique Canada
Disseminating gender statistics: The Canadian experience
Heather Dryburgh, Ph.D.Statistics Canada
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Outline
• Background • Dissemination projects for diverse data
users– Statistical tables– Access to microdata– Analytic papers
• Recent initiatives:– Gender and work database– Women and the Information Society
• Conclusions
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Canadian Context
• Commitment to gender equality – equality of treatment and outcomes
• Legal framework – 1985 Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
• Beijing 1995 and Federal Plan for Gender Equality
• Gender-Based Analysis
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STC’s mandate
• Statistics Act: “to collect, compile, analyse, abstract and publish statistical information relating to the commercial, industrial, financial, social, economic and general activities and condition of the people”
• Quality Assurance:– Relevance, Accuracy,– Timeliness, Accessibility– Interpretability, Coherence
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Producing gender statistics
• Tailored to the audience– Level of expertise– Policy needs– Ease of access
• User/Producer dialogue– Importance of consultation– An example from the General Social
Survey
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Dissemination of gender statistics
The Daily, STC’s Internet release journal (www.statcan.ca)
• Statistical tables– Canadian Statistics (free)– CANSIM II (small charge)
• Finding Data on Women: A Guide to Major Data Sources at Statistics Canada.
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Dissemination of gender statistics
• Access to microdata
• Issues:– Privacy Act– Confidentiality of information
• Dissemination– Research Data Centres– Public Use Microdata files– Data Liberation Initiative
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Dissemination of gender statistics
• Analytic papers– Complexity determined by the
audience– Flagship journals– Analytic papers and contributions to
scholarly journals• Occasional special publications
– Women in Canada• Conference participation
– Statistics Canada’s annual Socio-economic Conference
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New innovations in disseminating gender statistics:
The Gender and Work Database
andWomen in the Information
Society
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the gender and work database
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Developing a “meta-level tool”
York University, Statistics Canada, plus many other partners
• noted absences or gaps in the existing, publicly available data - devising new ways of accessing this data
• identified and created relationships between variables not already considered by STC or in the existing literature
• involved experts in the field for multi-dimensional tables as well as key concepts and resources
• develop ways to link social science knowledge to methods of dissemination
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combines original scholarship with
data tables
provides users with the tools to move
between data sources
offers multiple pathsinto given subject area
gwd
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the modules are:
• comparative perspectives on gender and work
• health care industry
• migration
• precarious employment
• technology
• unions
• unpaid work
the gender and work database
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two sides of gwd
statistical component
library component
thesaurus
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Using the GWD
• start with conceptual guides• look through the thesaurus for key
concepts• search the library for citations,
analytical papers, and stats tables
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obtain basic information
gender & work database
theorize complex social relations
data export and analysis
Possible applications
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Statistics CanadaStatistics Canada Statistique CanadaStatistique Canada
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Data in the gender and work database
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Measuring Infostates for Development:Measuring Infostates for Development: Panel discussion on gender-specific data and indicators on ICT use Panel discussion on gender-specific data and indicators on ICT use and needsand needs
Women in the Information SocietyStatistical evidence and analysis of the gender digital divide
Heidi Ertl and Heather Dryburgh, Statistics CanadaNovember 17, 2005Tunis, Tunisia
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Project rationale
• Call for reliable and comparable gender-specific indicators on ICTs (WSIS Plan of Action)
• Scarcity of gender-related ICT measurements and analyses– scope of coverage and degree of detail
• Need to quantify gender digital divide
• Aim to launch a publication with the research results at the 2005 World Summit on the Information Society in Tunis
Women in the Information Society
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Project objectives
• Construct pilot database– Extensive compilation of sex-disaggregated
statistical data on ICTs and gender
– Dealing with limitations and challenges
• Conduct analysis– Quantitative analysis supported by the database– Analysis of a qualitative nature to begin to
address outcomes and impacts of ICTs for women
Women in the Information Society
Statistics CanadaStatistics Canada Statistique CanadaStatistique Canada
Structure of the chapter
• Quantitative analysis - what do the numbers tell us?
– Supported by the database and attempts to close existing measurement gaps
– Contains statistical evidence and analysis of women’s experiences in both developed and developing countries
– Magnitude and evolution of gender digital divide with respect to:
– Access and patterns of use– ICT literacy, education and skills– ICT employment – Other digital divides
Women in the Information Society
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• Qualitative analysis
– Take into account information of a qualitative nature related to individual country circumstances, social norms, histories, cultures, etc
– Focus on developing regions of Africa, Latin America and Asia
– Analysis based on established framework of gender issues in ICT
Women in the Information Society
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• Elements of the gender digital divide
Do women have:
– Access to ICTs?
– Use of the information and knowledge generated in the Information Society?
– Input into the design, development and application of ICTs?
– The benefits associated with the opportunities and resources of the Information Society?
Women in the Information Society
Statistics CanadaStatistics Canada Statistique CanadaStatistique Canada
Conclusions
Approach• User/producer dialogue• Link data to research questions• Data and analytic content in combination
with contextual informationResults in a wide range of products that:• inform gender-based analysis • provide benchmarks for more in-depth
qualitative research • provide the evidence on which policy is
made