Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa

Development has been defined as essentially process of allocating and utilizing resources for the social and economic benefit of society. It has, however, also been observed that this process is characterized by profound inequality, which results in the benefits of development skewed in favor of some groups and not others. The evidence overwhelmingly shows that one key group systematically excluded has been women, not only in southern Africa, but globally, resulting in uneven development. There is growing recognition at various key levels in southern Africa, as elsewhere, that society assigns certain characteristics and roles to men and women, and those attributed to men have been given greater value than those of women, thus creating power imbalances that disadvantage women. Positive steps to enable women to participate more fully in development are motivated by the need to ensure their full empowerment, premised on an egalitarian ethos that seeks to transform society. In sum therefore, action towards gender equality and equity is nothing short of action towards achieving democracy, justice and sustainable development. the objective of this Development Bulletin to document few of these efforts for the purpose of information sharing and enhancing linkages and synergies in the formulation and implementation of gender policies, projects and programs in Southern Africa.

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Format: Technical paper biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2003-12
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10855/5528
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spelling dig-uneca-et-10855-55282018-12-28T15:44:08Z Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa Southern Africa development bulletin Development has been defined as essentially process of allocating and utilizing resources for the social and economic benefit of society. It has, however, also been observed that this process is characterized by profound inequality, which results in the benefits of development skewed in favor of some groups and not others. The evidence overwhelmingly shows that one key group systematically excluded has been women, not only in southern Africa, but globally, resulting in uneven development. There is growing recognition at various key levels in southern Africa, as elsewhere, that society assigns certain characteristics and roles to men and women, and those attributed to men have been given greater value than those of women, thus creating power imbalances that disadvantage women. Positive steps to enable women to participate more fully in development are motivated by the need to ensure their full empowerment, premised on an egalitarian ethos that seeks to transform society. In sum therefore, action towards gender equality and equity is nothing short of action towards achieving democracy, justice and sustainable development. the objective of this Development Bulletin to document few of these efforts for the purpose of information sharing and enhancing linkages and synergies in the formulation and implementation of gender policies, projects and programs in Southern Africa. 2011-01-07T23:51:19Z 2017-12-29T07:04:38Z 2003-12 Technical paper http://hdl.handle.net/10855/5528 eng 55 p. application/pdf AFR Southern Africa
institution ONU
collection DSpace
country Etiopía
countrycode ET
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-uneca-et
tag biblioteca
region África del Este
libraryname Biblioteca de la Comisión Económica para África de la ONU
language eng
description Development has been defined as essentially process of allocating and utilizing resources for the social and economic benefit of society. It has, however, also been observed that this process is characterized by profound inequality, which results in the benefits of development skewed in favor of some groups and not others. The evidence overwhelmingly shows that one key group systematically excluded has been women, not only in southern Africa, but globally, resulting in uneven development. There is growing recognition at various key levels in southern Africa, as elsewhere, that society assigns certain characteristics and roles to men and women, and those attributed to men have been given greater value than those of women, thus creating power imbalances that disadvantage women. Positive steps to enable women to participate more fully in development are motivated by the need to ensure their full empowerment, premised on an egalitarian ethos that seeks to transform society. In sum therefore, action towards gender equality and equity is nothing short of action towards achieving democracy, justice and sustainable development. the objective of this Development Bulletin to document few of these efforts for the purpose of information sharing and enhancing linkages and synergies in the formulation and implementation of gender policies, projects and programs in Southern Africa.
format Technical paper
title Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa
spellingShingle Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa
title_short Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa
title_full Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa
title_fullStr Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Gender and development in Southern Africa after the 1997 SADC gender declaration promoting gender equality in Southern Africa
title_sort gender and development in southern africa after the 1997 sadc gender declaration promoting gender equality in southern africa
publishDate 2003-12
url http://hdl.handle.net/10855/5528
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