Suzanne Petroni

Danish Minister of Gender Equality Seeks ICRW’s Expertise

Minister Manu Sareen visits ICRW to talk gender equality, women’s rights
Thu, 02/21/2013

Manu Sareen, Denmark’s minister of gender equality and ecclesiastical affairs, spoke with ICRW’s Suzanne Petroni and Stella Mukasa to learn more about the organization’s work on gender equality and preventing violence against women, among other issues.

Denmark’s minister of gender equality and ecclesiastical affairs on Feb. 19 visited the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) to learn more about the organization’s work on gender equality and preventing violence against women – particularly in the context of recent political attacks on women’s health and rights.

ICRW was the only nongovernmental organization that Minister Manu Sareen met with during his short visit to Washington, D.C., to help kick off the Nordic Cool 2013 international festival at the Kennedy Center for the Arts. A member of parliament for the Danish Social-Liberal Party, Sareen has been instrumental in, among other efforts, promoting the incorporation – or “mainstreaming” – of gender and equality perspectives in policy.

Indeed, for the past six years, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden have claimed the highest level of gender equality in the world, according to the Gender Gap Report. Gender equality ministers in each Nordic nation are keen to maintain this ranking, even amidst increasingly vocal opposition to some of their efforts.

“We’re holding the gender torch high,” Sareen said. “We’re doing this because other countries rely on us.”

Sareen met with ICRW’s Suzanne Petroni, senior director of gender, population and development, and Stella Mukasa, director of gender, violence and rights, for an hour-long conversation that centered largely on women’s health and rights and often touched on the upcoming session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), which will focus on eliminating all forms of violence against women.

Petroni discussed challenges that advocates for women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights continue to face in the United States and globally, and stressed the importance of sharing facts to counter opposing voices. “We have the evidence to make the case,” Petroni said.

Meanwhile, Mukasa shared her expertise on violence against women, saying that in tandem with prevention programs, there must be efforts to encourage communities to reflect on and adjust their attitudes about violence. “This has to be reinforced,” Mukasa said, “with long-term public messaging.”

In terms of incorporating gender perspectives into programs and policies, Sareen spoke of a need to develop “a new language” for the public, “explaining that this is for all of us – that men have a role; that we face problems, but also have to be part of the solutions.”

Sareen will return to the U.S. in March to represent Denmark at the CSW.

Stronger Policies for Youth

Better policies are needed to respond to young people's complex needs

In this blog, ICRW's Suzanne Petroni discusses why stronger policies are needed to respond to the complex and varied issues faced by today's youth, who comprise 43 percent of the world's population. Petroni will attend a Jan. 23 event co-hosted by ICRW to highlight recent milestones related to adolescent and youth health and development.

ICRW's Suzanne Petroni discusses why stronger policies are needed to respond to the complex and varied issues faced by today's youth, who comprise 43 percent of the world's population. 

Youth Set Vision for Their Future

Young people and allies at Bali forum establish agenda on health services, education access, more
Tue, 12/11/2012

Delegates at the recent Global Youth Forum in Bali, Indonesia, established the first-ever set of recommendations outlining a vision for young people's future around the world.

Nearly 1,000 delegates at the recent Global Youth Forum in Bali, Indonesia established the first-ever set of recommendations outlining a vision for young people's future around the world.

The three-day event was co-hosted by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the government of Indonesia as part of the official United Nations review of the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development. It drew more than 600 young leaders from some 130 countries, as well as hundreds of representatives from governments, United Nations agencies, nongovernmental organizations and the private sector. More than 2,500 people participated virtually via online platforms.

Suzanne Petroni,who directs the International Center for Research on Women's (ICRW) gender, population and development program, helped organize the forum and facilitated discussions during the event. "The thousands of youth and youth allies from around the world who participated in the Global Youth Forum have jointly designed the most positive, comprehensive and forward-looking framework for the world's young people we have ever seen," Petroni said. "As the international community creates a global development agenda beyond 2015, the Bali Declaration should form an integral part of their discussions."

Among its recommendations, the Bali declaration - an official United Nations document - calls on governments to:

  • Provide and evaluate universal access to youth-friendly health services including sexual and reproductive health services that include safe and legal abortion, maternity care, contraception, and prevention, care, treatment and counseling for HIV and sexually-transmitted infections
  • Ensure and fund universal access to quality, comprehensive education at all levels
  • End harmful traditional practices, such as early and forced marriage and genital mutilation
  • Repeal laws and regulations that permit violence and/or discrimination against young people, especially those who are marginalized, including laws that criminalize young people living with HIV/AIDS and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) youth
  • Increase investment in programs that foster youth entrepreneurship and job training
  • Ensure equitable access to decent work free from discrimination and respectful of diversity of all young people

Read more: Suzanne Petroni's commentary about the forum, The Power and Promise of Youth and the full text of the Bali Global Youth Forum Declaration.

Commentary: The Power and Promise of Youth

The world's youth are critical to the international development agenda
Tue, 12/04/2012

ICRW's Suzanne Petroni argues that young people must continue to take leadership roles and become agents of change in driving the international public health and development agenda. Not only is this their right, but experience shows that the most effective programs and policies targeting youth are designed, implemented and evaluated with meaningful youth engagement. 

The recent United States presidential election confirmed the political power held by young people. Some 19 percent of the total votes on Nov. 6 were cast by young people between 18 and 29 years old – an even greater share of the electorate than in 2008. There should be no question that young people, through their engagement, advocacy and votes, are absolutely helping to determine the future of our country.

The rise of young people's influence is not contained to the U.S. Youth are showing their influence around the globe. Half of the world's population is under 30 years old, and these youth, more than 3 billion strong, comprise the most well-informed and well-connected generation the world has ever known.

We have the fortune of joining nearly 1,000 of these youth in Bali, Indonesia this week – not sightseeing, but formulating the international development agenda for the future.

As the world heads toward the 20th anniversaries of the major international development conferences of the 1990s and the conclusion of the Millennium Development Goals in 2015, the United Nations is bringing together young leaders and experts on youth from around the world to participate in the Bali Global Youth Forum, hosted by the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Beyond 2014.

Young people and their allies from 190 countries will discuss how they – and the rest of the international community – should address the many challenges and opportunities they face. And as the U.S. Agency for International Development recently acknowledged in its first ever youth policy, how young people act on these challenges and opportunities will ultimately affect the fate of us all.

In Bali, we will chart a path forward ensuring young people's right to lead healthy lives and promote their overall well being. This includes better access to the information and services they need to prevent unwanted pregnancy, sexually transmitted infections, violence, and alcohol and drug abuse. We want to change the course for adolescents and youth, who currently comprise the majority of those newly infected with HIV/AIDS, and who face far too frequent too early and unwanted pregnancy.

It is incomprehensible to us that in many developing countries, girls are forced to marry shortly after – and sometimes even before – puberty, often to much older men. The UN estimates that nearly 142 million girls will be married before their 18th birthday in the coming decade. Young women – married or not – face increased risk of sexual violence, too early and unwanted pregnancy and maternal mortality. And young people everywhere face constraints and taboos related to their sexuality that often limits their ability to simply be themselves.

We will consider how best to provide opportunities for decent work and quality education to an ever-growing population of youth. According to the World Bank, 67 million children of primary school age and 72 million of lower secondary school age worldwide did not attend school in 2009. Without the education they need to survive and thrive in a modernizing world, young men and women will not be able to contribute fully to their societies.

Our mandate in Bali thus includes considering how societies can respect young people's sexuality, and uphold their rights, and improve gender equity and equality, while supporting youth to act responsibly on their own behalf.

As they will in Bali, young people must continue to take leadership roles and become agents of change in driving the international public health and development agenda. Not only is this their right, but experience shows us that the most effective programs and policies targeting youth are designed, implemented and evaluated with meaningful youth engagement. Governments and civil society must therefore promote and provide capacity-building opportunities, including financial and technical support, to enable young people to participate fully in decisions that affect them and their peers.

Finally, we will work toward a future where young people participate actively and take ownership in their futures, which means authentic, honest and meaningful youth-adult partnerships. Not tokenism. In fact, the vast majority of delegates at the Global Youth Forum are in that critical age range of 18 to 29 years old, when vital decisions about personal and community life are made.

Those of us attending the Global Youth Forum all hold a common belief – that empowering young people with accurate information, education and services will lead to healthy and productive decision-making for themselves and their communities. Just as important, however is our knowledge that communities, too, must support changes in social norms that will allow them to do so.

Young people around the world, including the ones who will join us in Bali this week, are the ones who can lead us and our planet toward a healthier, more equitable and more sustainable present and future. Join us in enabling them to do so.

Suzanne Petroni directs ICRW's gender, population and development program. She serves on the board of directors of Advocates for Youth and sits on the International Steering Committee for the ICPD Global Youth Forum

Meredith Waters is a senior at the George Washington University majoring in public health and was selected by the United Nations as a Respondent for the Global Youth Fourm in Bali. She is also a member of the International Youth Leadership Council at Advocates for Youth.

This commentary also appears in Global Post.

Hillary Clinton's Global Feminist Legacy

Her tenure at State may have lacked a bold diplomatic achievement. But posterity will remember her efforts to help women.
Thu, 03/21/2013
National Journal

ICRW's Suzanne Petroni talks to National Journal about the importance of Hillary Clinton and Melanne Verveer's work on promoting women's issues, as well as the need to make the Global Women's Issues office and Ambassador-at-Large position permanent. 

Op-Ed: Empowering youth to own their futures

Wed, 12/05/2012
GlobalPost

In this Op-Ed, ICRW's Suzanne Petroni argues that young people must continue to take leadership roles and become agents of change in driving the international public health and development agenda.

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