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Gender Inequity and Poverty: why gender

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Title: Gender Inequity and Poverty: why gender


1
Gender Inequity and Poverty why gender?
2
International consensus on development
  • Reduce and eliminate poverty
  • Stop preventable disease, promote health for all
  • Build capacities across the population support
    universal literacy and education
  • Sustainable environment/resources

3
What has gender got to do with development?
  • Poverty
  • Health
  • Education

4
Poverty
  • Disaggregation of the poor
  • Across the world, women and children represent a
    disproportionate percentage of the worlds poor.
  • Feminization of poverty
  • growing phenomenon
  • refers to the large and increasing proportions of
    women in agriculture, casual wage labour and
    unpaid labour
  • Assetlessness
  • Fewer women than men own assets necessary to earn
    a living or to offer collaterals to get loans.

5
Gender differences and poverty
  • Gender intersects with economic deprivation to
    produce more intensified forms of poverty for
    women than men poor women are disadvantaged by
    being women as well as by being poor and the
    effects of poverty are therefore worse.
  • Gender makes poverty harder to escape since women
    face gender bias in markets, barriers to labour
    market entry and poor access to productive
    resources including information.
  • Womens experience of poverty is different to
    that of men, for example women might experience
    time poverty as a particularly acute aspect of
    their deprivation.
  • Gender makes women vulnerable to certain
    processes of poverty which do not apply to men,
    for instance, poverty resulting from marital
    breakdown, death of a spouse, or social exclusion
    resulting from sexual behaviour considered
    inappropriate.

6
Why women are poorer than men
  • Time poverty and reduced mobility due to unpaid
    work and responsibilities for domestic tasks and
    care of the household members
  • Biases in labour markets producing low returns to
    labour
  • Lack of access to resources such as credit,
    property and education, the latter in particular
    reinforcing womens low returns to labour
  • Lack of control over earned income producing
    disadvantage within households
  • Limitations on access to public space producing
    restrictions in access to labour markets,
    restrictions on mobility limitations on
    legitimacy in spaces where resource distribution
    is negotiated and limited access to information.

7
Health
  • Half a million women die and eight million women
    are disabled annually from pregnancy related
    causes (WHO et al 2000).
  • Maternal mortality ratios (maternal deaths per
    100 000 live births) in 2000 standing at 830 in
    Africa and 330 in Asia
  • In Africa and Asia over 40 percent of births are
    not attended by skilled health professionals
    trained in pregnancy, childbirth and the
    immediate post-natal period.
  • About 25 percent of children are born with low
    birth weight due to the health problems suffered
    by the mother during pregnancy leading to long
    term poor health

8
Education
  • the number of out-of-school children is declining
  • But
  • girls still accounted for 57 percent of the
    out-of-school children of primary school age of
    primary school age worldwide in 2001 and for more
    than 60 percent in the Arab States and in South
    and West Asia (UNESCO 2005).
  • amongst 83 developing countries with available
    data, only 16 have gender parity in enrolment at
    secondary level, and only four at tertiary level
    (UNESCO 2005)
  • In 2002, about 800 million adults in the world
    were illiterate, most of them in sub-Saharan
    Africa and East and South Asia. Of them, 64
    percent are women.

9
Why should NGOs address gender?
  • Global gender gaps
  • Lessons learned in development objectives of
    poverty reduction, better health and universal
    basic education cannot be achieved without
    addressing gender inequities
  • Gender inequity and poverty are inextricably
    linked and mutually reinforcing

10
So what is gender?
  • Gender is the social definition of what it is to
    be a man or woman in a given society.
  • Gender refers to the rules, norms, customs and
    practices through which the biological
    differences between males and females is
    transformed into social differences between men
    and women, boys and girls.
  • This process results in girls/women and men/boys
    being valued differently, having unequal life
    chances and opportunities
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