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The Worldwatch Institute is pleased to send you the fourth in our series
of World Summit Policy Briefs, From Rio to Johannesburg: What’s Good for
Women is Good for the World, by Staff Researcher, Danielle Nierenberg.
The World Summit Policy Brief series highlights and provides
recommendations on key environmental and sustainable development issues
that will shape this year’s World Summit on Sustainable Development.
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<font face="Verdana" size=4 color="#CC6600"><b>From Rio to
Johannesburg:</font><font size=4> <br>
<br>
<br>
</font><font face="Verdana" size=4 color="#CC6600">What’s Good for Women
is Good for the World<br>
</font><font face="Verdana" color="#006699">by</b></font><font face="Verdana" size=4 color="#CC6600">
</font><font face="Verdana" color="#006699"><b>Danielle Nierenberg<br>
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<font face="Verdana" size=2>WASHINGTON, DC April 30</b>, 2002 -
</font>Throughout the 1990s, several major United Nations conferences
stressed the importance of including women in sustainable
development. But despite these commitments on paper, there has been
far too little action. True and meaningful equity between women and
men will take much more than inserting a paragraph here and there in the
documents issued at a United Nations convention or in national laws.
Gender myopia—or blindness to women’s issues—still distorts
environmental, economic, and health policies. Today, a full decade after
the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, governments, development agencies, and even some NGOs
remain resolutely patriarchal. Despite the widespread belief that women
“have come a long way” in achieving improved social and economic
status,<b> </b>they continue to face many of the same obstacles they did
ten years ago. And in some cases, these problems have become even more
formidable.<br>
<br>
At the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, women came together as never before and
presented their vision of a world in which all women are educated, free
from violence, and able to make their own reproductive choices. As
a result of this mobilization, the Rio Declaration and Agenda 21 called
for women’s full participation in sustainable development and improvement
in their status in all levels of society.<br>
<br>
The work that began at the Earth Summit did not end in Rio. Because of
the efforts made by women’s NGOs there, women’s health and human rights
have made their way into the international agenda. Rio’s Agenda 21 set
the stage for the International Conference on Population and Development
(ICPD) in Cairo, Egypt in 1994. The Cairo Programme of Action
reaffirmed women’s rights and their equal participation in all spheres of
society as a prerequisite for better human development. <br>
<br>
The declarations and promises made at these conferences were important
first steps to improving women’s lives, but much remains to be done.
Consider the following statistics reported by the United Nations and
other health and environment organizations:
<dl>
<dd>More than 350 million women worldwide lack any access to family
planning services.
<dd>Over 500,000 women die each year from complications during pregnancy
and childbirth.
<dd>Population growth is still rapid in the world’s 48 least developed
nations—roughly 80 million people are added to the planet each
year. Many of them are born in places where lack of infrastructure
and public services shorten the lives of both the young and old.
<dd>The largest generation of young people in human history—1.7 billion
people aged 10 to 24—are about to enter their reproductive years.
This wave of youth is occurring at the same time that international
funding, especially from the United States, for family planning and
contraceptives has been cut. As a result, many of the world’s young are
left without guidance and the tools to protect themselves from unwanted
pregnancies, violent relationships, and sexually transmitted diseases.
<dd>In most of the developing world, the majority of new HIV/AIDS
infections occur in young people, with young women especially vulnerable.
In sub-Saharan Africa, where AIDS is spreading faster than anywhere else
on the planet, women account for 55 percent of all new cases of
HIV. Most of these women lack the sexual autonomy to refuse sex or
to demand that their “partners” use condoms.
<dd>Gender based violence takes many forms and plagues girls and women
throughout their lives. One in three women worldwide has been
beaten, coerced into sex, or otherwise abused in her lifetime. An
estimated sixty million girls are considered “missing” in China and India
because of sex-selective abortions, female infanticide, and neglect. More
than 2 million women undergo female genital mutilation each year, which
leads to a lifetime of suffering and psychological trauma.
<dd>Despite advances in education for both girls and boys, two thirds of
the world’s 876 million illiterate people are female. In 22 African and
nine Asian nations, school enrollment for girls is less than 80 percent
that for boys, and only about half of girls in the least developed
nations stay in school after grade 4.
<dd>In most parts of the world, single-mother households are home to a
disproportionate number of the children living in poverty.
<dd>Globally women earn on average two thirds to three fourths as much as
men for the same work. In addition, women perform most of the invisible
work—housekeeping, cooking, collecting firewood and water, childcare,
gardening—that sustains households from day to day. Most official
economic accounting measures do not account for the value of invisible
work. If these services were “counted,” they would be valued at
about one-third of the world’s economic production.
<dd>Women are vastly underrepresented in all levels of government and in
international institutions. In 2000, women held only 14 percent of seats
in parliaments worldwide. At the United Nations, women made up only 21
percent of senior management in 1999.
</dl>The World Summit on Sustainable Development in South Africa is an
opportunity for world leaders to eliminate these inequities by
recognizing that what is good for women is good for the world. In
addition to enhancing human rights, improving women’s lives has a whole
range of side benefits—from lower population growth and reduced child
mortality to better management of natural resources and healthier
economies. For <u>real </u>change on gender and population to take place,
nations should take the following steps:
<dl><u>
<dd>Meet or beat the goals set out at Cairo and remove barriers to
comprehensive and reproductive health care at the national
level.</u> At Cairo, governments agreed to spend $17 billion a year
(in 1993 dollars) by 2000 to achieve universal access to basic
reproductive health services for all by 2015. Ironically, the world’s
poorest nations are closer to meeting the goals of Cairo than the world’s
wealthy countries—spending close to 70 percent of their committed levels.
Wealthy nations, in contrast, have yet to reach even 40 percent of their
Cairo commitment. <u>
<dd>Lobby the United States to remove the barriers to funding for
international family planning</u>. The global gag rule, which prohibits
U.S. funding to international agencies that even talk about abortion with
their clients, should be immediately rescinded by President Bush. The
administration should also deliver on its promise of $34 million in
funding for the United Nations Population Fund. <u>
<dd>Increase the number of women holding public office</u>. The Women’s
Environment and Development Organization (WEDO) and other groups have
called for 50/50 representation at all levels—from local village councils
to the highest offices in national parliaments. In South Africa—where a
quota system was initiated in 2000—women are steadily making their way
into seats in the National Assembly and now hold 8 of the 29 cabinet
positions. <u>
<dd>Remove obstacles that prevent girls from going to and staying in
school.</u> Study after study shows that girls with more years of
education not only have fewer children, but their health and the health
of the children they do have is much better. In Egypt, only 5
percent of women who stayed in school past the primary level had children
while still in their teens, while over half of women without schooling
became teenage mothers. <u>
<dd>Educate men and boys about the importance of gender equity and shared
responsibility.</u> Stereotypes and cultural expectations about
masculinity prevent many men from taking responsibility for reproductive
health and childcare. Some feel threatened by women’s independence
and express their manhood through violence or withholding money from
their families. As men's roles change, the effort to include them
in family planning and reproductive health is gaining momentum. In
Nicaragua, workshops for unlearning <i>machismo</i> and improving
communication skills have led to less domestic violence. And in Mali,
male volunteers have been trained to provide information about
reproductive health and family planning and distribute
contraceptives. <u>
<dd>Increase youth awareness about reproductive health issues, including
HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases</u>. In places
like Uganda and Senegal, government commitment to AIDS education at both
the national and village level has helped bring the epidemic in those
nations under control. In Mexico, peer counseling programs allow young
people to talk to and be educated by their peers about sexual health,
improving communication between generations about sexuality and family
planning.<u>
<dd>Enact and enforce strong laws that protect women from
violence</u>. Many national laws entrap women in violent
relationships or make it impossible to prosecute men for beatings, rape,
and other forms of abuse. Some countries—Mexico and the Philippines, for
instance—have revised their rape laws, making the act a “crime against
one’s freedom.” In Belize and Malaysia, laws and penal codes have
been reformed to criminalize domestic violence. <br>
<br>
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<font face="Verdana" size=1>The Worldwatch Institute is a non-profit independent environmental research organization, which has educated the public and policymakers about important global environmental and development issues for more than 20 years. This brief is part of an ongoing series, outlining priorities for the World Summit on Sustainable Development. If you would like to subscribe to the whole series, please go to <a href="http://www.worldwatch.org/worldsummit" eudora="autourl">www.worldwatch.org/worldsummit</a>. <br>
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We also encourage you to spread the word and pass this information on to interested people. Send questions or comments to worldsummit@worldwatch.org. For more in-depth information about the World Summit, visit our website at <a href="http://www.worldwatch.org/worldsummit" eudora="autourl">www.worldwatch.org/worldsummit</a>. To get more information about some of the World Summit topics visit the State of the World 2002: World Summit Edition webpage.<br>
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