Gender and development Simon Oakes Philip Allan Publishers © 2015.
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Transcript of Gender and development Simon Oakes Philip Allan Publishers © 2015.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Gender and development
Simon Oakes
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Presentation outline
• Gender and development
• Traditional barriers to educating girls
• Educating girls is ‘smart economics’
• The Millennium Development Goals
• Primary school progress report
• More needs to be done
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Gender and development
• Development means ways in which a place seeks to develop economically and to improve quality of life for its people.
• A country’s level of development is shown primarily by economic indicators of average wealth and/or income.
• Development encompasses a variety of social and political criteria too.
• Gender equality is widely regarded as an important indicator of development.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Gender and development
The Gender Inequality Index (GII) is a composite index devised by the United Nations. It measures gender inequalities related to three aspects of social and economic development. These are:
1. reproductive health, measured by maternal mortality ratio and adolescent birth rates
2. empowerment, measured by proportion of parliamentary seats occupied by females and proportion of adult females and males aged 25 years and older with some secondary education
3. the labour force participation rate of female and male populations aged 15 years and older
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Traditional barriers to girls’ schooling
Poverty (e.g. poor parents need some of their
children to work and earn money instead
of studying)
Cultural barriers(e.g. the belief held by parents in some
societies that there is little value in girls’
education)
Perceived risks (e.g. parents may be
fearful of allowing girls to travel long distances to school
on their own in lawless rural areas )
Neglected needs (e.g. poor rural
schools may lack adequate sanitation
facilities for girls, leading to absences
and drop-outs)
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Traditional barriers
• Opposition to education for girls is very strong in some places.
• Pakistan’s Swat Valley and northeast Nigeria are places where men have taken extreme measures to stop girls being educated.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Educating girls is ‘smart economics’
• If women are educated to the same high standard as mean, it improves a country’s human resources.
• There will be more skilled workers which can attract foreign direct investment from overseas (this happened in China).
• Microfinance schemes in India and Bangladesh have helped educated women to run their own businesses successfully.
• In all these ways, educating women helps grow a country’s gross domestic product (GDP).
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Educating girls is ‘smart economics’
Better education for women
Economic growth of a
nation
Social status of women rises; women enter
work in politics, health and education
Fertility rates fall, and the health of children at home often improves
Can you explain the varied ways in which better education for women can help a country to develop economically?
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Millennium Development Goals
• Eight specific objectives for the global community created at the UN Millennium Summit in New York in 2000.
• The Millennium Declaration, adopted by the world leaders, promised to: ‘free all men, women, and children from the abject and de-humanizing conditions of extreme poverty’.
• MDG 2 is ‘to achieve universal primary education’.
• MDG 3 has as one of its targets: ‘Eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary education’.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Millennium Development Goals
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Primary school progress report
• According to the UN, primary-school enrolment in developing regions has increased from 80% to 90% since 1990.
• There has also been a significant reduction in the gender gap.
• In 1990, for every 100 boys enrolled in primary school in developing regions, there were 86 girls.
• By 2012 the figure had risen to 97 girls per 100 boys.
• However, significant differences between regions remain.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Western Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and
Oceania (Pacific island groups) still remain noticeably
below-average
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Primary school progress report
• A key driver was the introduction of free primary education (FPE) in some countries (e.g. Zambia, Kenya).
• School feeding programmes run by organisations such as the UN World Food Programme act as an incentive for parents to send their children to school (a free meal at school saves parents money and also helps improve children’s concentration and learning in the classroom).
• Conditional cash transfer schemes include Brazil’s Bolsa Família programme. The head of a household is granted around US$12 a month per child, provided the child stays in education and has regular medical check-ups.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Primary school progress report
• More still needs to be done with primary schools in some countries.
• Growth in school attendance has not always been accompanied by an increase in school buildings, equipment or trained teachers.
• This means that the quality of education provided can be poor.
• There are also issues around what is taught and how it is taught.
‘If teachers focuson male pupils and ignore
female pupils in the classroom, gender inequality
will not be challenged. It is also vital that girls feel safe at school and are therefore able
to learn.’
Professor Katie Willis
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Next step The secondary school challenge
• Education remains key in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that will replace the MDGs (which end in 2015).
• Governments and international agencies are turning their attention now to secondary schools.
• In much of Asia, Latin America and Africa there are significant differences between levels of secondary education in men and women aged 25 and over, as the following slides show.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Write a list of the names of as many countries as you can where the education of women is still below 40%.
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Now look at the data for men. Can you name any countries where there is a marked imbalance?
Philip Allan Publishers © 2015
Further reading
• United Nations Girls’ Education Initiative (UNGEI) has useful country-specific data on this topic: www.ungei.org
• UNICEF’s education website has data and case studies on gender and education themes: www.unicef.org/education
• UNWomen provides up-to-date gender statistics and details of development policies: www.unwomen.org/en
This resource is part of GEOGRAPHY REVIEW, a magazine written for A-level students by subject experts. To subscribe to the full magazine go to: http://www.hoddereducation.co.uk/geographyreview