UNDP Offers Six-Point Plan To Fast-Track Women In Politics I
UNDP Offers Six-Point Plan To Fast-Track Women
In Politics In Asia- Pacific
20
September, Bangkok -- It will take 50 years for gender
balance to be achieved in Asia-Pacific national legislatures
if the increase in women’s participation in parliaments
remains at the current pace, says a UN Development Programme
(UNDP) study released this week. Economic progress will be
limited without equal opportunity for men and women to
influence political and economic decision-making, according
to the report, which offers a six-step action plan to
fast-track women into politics.
Globally, women hold slightly less than 20 per cent of seats in parliament. In Asia-Pacific, just over 18 percent of all members of national parliaments are women. Women’s representation in the Pacific, excluding Australia and New Zealand, is the lowest in the world, lagging behind the Arab region. On average, women are less than 10 per cent of ministers in Asia-Pacific, according to the UNDP study.
The recommendations in Gender Equality in Elected Office in Asia-Pacific: Six Actions to Expand Women’s Empowerment offer multiple policies to speed up gender equality. As every country has its own specific social, political, economic and historical circumstances no single approach will work, but the approaches outlined in the study have the advantage of being able to be individually tailored for each specific national context. The study was launched today as part of a two-day UNDP meeting on its governance and gender programmes in Asia.
“A political system where half the population does not fully participate limits the opportunity for men and women to influence and benefit from political and economic decisions,” says Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi, Director of UNDP’s Democratic Governance Group.
There are glimmers of change in Asia-Pacific. At the recently concluded Pacific Islands Forum, Australia’s first female Prime Minister Julia Gillard recently pledged considerable funds to raise the status of women in the Pacific Islands. Thailand’s first female Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra is also committed to developing the role of women in her country. The government recently set up Thai Women Empowerment Funds to create jobs and activities for local women to assist them to participate in politics and administration.
The leading countries in the region for women’s membership into parliament are New Zealand and Nepal, where women are one-third of all members of parliament. Women are more than one-quarter of parliamentarians in Afghanistan, Australia, Laos, Timor-Leste and Vietnam, according to the report.
The report examines a range of institutional reforms which can contribute towards gender equality in elected office. Such topics as gender quotas or increased financing to assist women running for office are addressed, but as the lead author of the report, Pippa Norris, says, “It is not just a simple formula of add women and stir. There are many other windows of opportunities for countries to improve the situation of women in politics.”
The six-step action
plan suggests a range of options to increase women’s
political participation,
including:
Constitutional
reform includes expanding rights to vote and to
hold public office, removing any residual forms of sex
discrimination. Constitutions can also incorporate positive
action provisions, including specifying reserved seats or
the requirement for legal
quotas.
Electoral, campaign
finance, and party laws regulate the nomination,
campaigning, and election process for entering parliaments.
The study demonstrates that countries using proportional
representation party lists and mixed electoral systems
included on average more women in their lower house of
parliament.
Reserved seats
and legal gender quotas are a related strategy
which has been carried out during the last decade in almost
a dozen Asia-Pacific nations. Overall the study demonstrates
that the proportion of women elected to parliament during
the last decade rose at a faster pace in Asia-Pacific
countries which had implemented legal gender quotas compared
with those which had not used these
measures.
Party selection
rules and nomination procedures are also vital for
achieving gender balance in elected office. The design and
implementation of party quotas varies across and within
countries, for example in their target levels, how far there
is rank ordering on party lists, and how far formal rules
are respected in
practice.
Capacity
development policies and programmes, especially by
civil society organizations working outside of parties,
involving equal opportunity initiatives, have been widely
used. These can include candidate training, induction and
mentoring programmes, recruitment initiatives, and awareness
campaigns to counter stereotyping of candidates according to
their
gender.
Gender-sensitive
rules and procedures in elected bodies will help
women candidates to do their jobs once in office. Gender
issues should be integrated into all parliamentary
committees, debates, action plans, commissions, report and
legislation to make sure that there are equal opportunities
for women and men members.
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