Progressing gender equality post-2015: harnessing the multiplier effects of existing achievements
Progressing gender equality post-2015: harnessing the multiplier effects of existing achievements
This article argues that international efforts to progress gender equality now and post-2015 need to build on the achievements of the MDGs and other international frameworks, but simultaneously address the gender dynamics that underpin the root causes of poverty. The first half of the article seeks to unpack the ways in which gender inequalities underpin five clusters of MDGs: poverty and sustainable development; service access; care and caregiving; voice and agency; international partnerships and accountability. The analysis then turns to highlight the importance of harnessing the momentum from other global initiatives such as CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women) and the Beijing Platform for Action to promote more fundamental change including: the establishment of a more powerful UN agency to champion gender equality; the institutionalisation of gender budgeting and gender-responsive aid effectiveness approaches; and the promotion of gender-sensitive social protection to tackle gender-specific experiences of poverty and vulnerability.
113-122
Jones, Nicola
14371542-0706-4cd5-8d3e-bde98dfe334c
Holmes, Rebecca
eb0aae88-4581-4a3c-aeab-f428007af7f0
Espey, Jessica
cb16d2a6-2e51-43df-a274-e85776ab605a
13 January 2010
Jones, Nicola
14371542-0706-4cd5-8d3e-bde98dfe334c
Holmes, Rebecca
eb0aae88-4581-4a3c-aeab-f428007af7f0
Espey, Jessica
cb16d2a6-2e51-43df-a274-e85776ab605a
Jones, Nicola, Holmes, Rebecca and Espey, Jessica
(2010)
Progressing gender equality post-2015: harnessing the multiplier effects of existing achievements.
IDS Bulletin, 41 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/j.1759-5436.2010.00112.x).
Abstract
This article argues that international efforts to progress gender equality now and post-2015 need to build on the achievements of the MDGs and other international frameworks, but simultaneously address the gender dynamics that underpin the root causes of poverty. The first half of the article seeks to unpack the ways in which gender inequalities underpin five clusters of MDGs: poverty and sustainable development; service access; care and caregiving; voice and agency; international partnerships and accountability. The analysis then turns to highlight the importance of harnessing the momentum from other global initiatives such as CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women) and the Beijing Platform for Action to promote more fundamental change including: the establishment of a more powerful UN agency to champion gender equality; the institutionalisation of gender budgeting and gender-responsive aid effectiveness approaches; and the promotion of gender-sensitive social protection to tackle gender-specific experiences of poverty and vulnerability.
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Published date: 13 January 2010
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Local EPrints ID: 496556
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496556
ISSN: 0265-5012
PURE UUID: 761f3716-9ee7-44d6-96c0-2c723705b169
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Date deposited: 18 Dec 2024 17:57
Last modified: 19 Dec 2024 03:09
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Author:
Nicola Jones
Author:
Rebecca Holmes
Author:
Jessica Espey
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