Millennium Development Goals

Targeting Poverty and Gender Inequality to Improve Maternal Health

Targeting Poverty and Gender Inequality to Improve Maternal Health

Silvia Paruzzolo, Rekha Mehra, Aslihan Kes, Charles Ashbaugh
2010

Hundreds of thousands of women die every year in childbirth or from pregnancy-related causes. Virtually all of these maternal deaths occur in poor countries. In order to reduce maternal deaths and improve the overall life chances of poor mothers, policy and programs must address poverty and gender inequality, two inter-related, root causes of maternal death.

This paper, prepared for Women Deliver 2010, examines the ways in which poverty and gender inequality impact maternal mortality by creating barriers to maternal healthcare access and utilization. It also analyzes strategies designed to increase utilization to identify best practices.

An executive summary of this report is available:
in English

in Spanish
in French
 

(380.84 KB)

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Commentary: How to Achieve Millennium Development Goal 3

Translate Political Commitments into Action
Fri, 09/17/2010

World leaders will convene in New York September 20 - 23 to discuss progress toward the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and the emerging consensus is that women and girls must be at the center of global development efforts to ensure their effectiveness and sustainability.

World leaders will convene in New York September 20 - 23 to discuss progress toward the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and the emerging consensus is that women and girls must be at the center of global development efforts to ensure their effectiveness and sustainability.

Millennium Development Goal threeJust five years from the 2015 deadline, progress has stalled due in part to the global economic downturn. MDG 3 – to empower women and achieve gender equality – is widely identified as the lynchpin to maximize limited resources and ultimately achieve all eight MDGs.

As ICRW has stressed, political commitment is a crucial first step to gender equality. Indeed, recent statements from the United States, the United Nations and others, as well as the recent establishment of U.N. Women, indicate an unprecedented political commitment to women’s empowerment and gender equality. This offers a unique opportunity to refocus the global approach to advance progress on the MDGs. But commitments alone are not enough. Achieving gender equality will require increased financial resources, action informed by research, strict accountability and perseverance.

Gender equality requires fundamental transformation in the distribution of power, opportunities and outcomes for both women and men. If MDG strategies vow to truly overcome inequalities based on gender, they must tackle the persistent, underlying social norms that restrict women from accessing health care and education opportunities and exclude them from economic and political spheres. Equalizing available resources between women and men is necessary but not sufficient. To achieve more equitable relationships, we have to question women’s and men’s beliefs about their roles in society. Our efforts to better women’s health, economic and social status must involve men.

The complexity of achieving gender equality should not dissuade us from doing what is not just the right thing to do, but the smart thing to do. If we fail on MDG 3, we will stymie progress on tackling poverty, hunger, disease, illiteracy and depletion of natural resources.

Social transformation takes time, but we know how to affect change. It will require dedicated funding streams, an investment in regular reporting out of sex-disaggregated data and constant research and evaluation to ensure impact. It will require close monitoring by civil society to hold governments accountable for their pledges to equality. And it will require a long-term commitment that persists for years, even when newsworthy summits have ended.

Gender inequality is a problem with a solution – a solution that we have begun to realize. Recent political commitments are the beginning, but we will be required to do even more in the coming years. Only when national governments, multilateral institutions and civil society organizations commit, with funding and action, to changing the social norms that perpetuate gender inequality, will we hasten progress toward all eight Millennium Development Goals.

Gender Mainstreaming: Making It Happen

Gender Mainstreaming: Making It Happen

Rekha Mehra and Geeta Rao Gupta
2006

Gender mainstreaming was designed to bring gender equality issues into the core of development activities. It is a strategy for making women’s as well as men’s concerns and experiences an integral dimension of the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of policies and programs in all political, economic and societal spheres so that women and men benefit equally and inequality is not perpetuated.

This paper examines what it will take to effectively implement gender mainstreaming and argues that from the perspective of a development agency, the most critical element of mainstreaming – mainstreaming in operations – has not yet been seriously attempted.

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India Enacts Gender Quotas for Parliament

ICRW Applauds Groundbreaking Legislation
Fri, 03/12/2010

NEW DELHI - A groundbreaking law that would allow a third of India’s 545-seat lower house and 248-seat upper house to be reserved for women was passed March 9 in the upper house. In response to this historic vote, the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) issued the following statement from Priya Nanda, group director of social and economic development, in ICRW’s New Delhi office:

“The Women’s Reservation Bill is a crucial first step in breaking down the barriers women face when it comes to political participation. It is an exciting moment for women in India to know that the long fight to gain access to positions of power may soon lead to eventual victory if the bill is signed into law,” Nanda said.

“The fact is that women’s empowerment requires breaking the mold. Quotas help bring about the necessary cycle of change and a shift in attitudes about what women can achieve. Our findings show that when innovations in social norms at the national level — such as gender quotas — are combined with support for greater political participation, they have a quicker, more powerful impact on transforming women’s lives. However, if there isn’t a deliberate effort to ensure that women are truly integrated into the political decision-making process, the law is danger of becoming nothing more than a symbolic gesture,” Nanda added.
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Notes to editors:

1. Our research findings on the connection between innovation and women’s empowerment can be found in our “Innovation for Women’s Empowerment and Gender Equality” paper. The paper attempts to answer the question: how and when do innovations create long-term, positive shifts in gender relations. 

Media Contact: 
Jeannie Bunton, 202.742.1316, Jbunton@icrw.org
Mission Statement: 

ICRW's mission is to empower women, advance gender equality and fight poverty in the developing world. To accomplish this, ICRW works with partners to conduct empirical research, build capacity and advocate for evidence-based, practical ways to change policies and programs.

Violence Against Women Must Stop

Violence Against Women Must Stop
Toward Achieving the Third Millennium Development Goal to Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2005

This series explores those social, cultural and economic factors that could encourage progress toward achieving the third Millennium Development Goal to promote gender equality and empower women. Topics include decreasing violence against women, improving infrastructure and encouraging women's property ownership.

Other publications in this series:
Infrastructure Shortfalls Cost Poor Women Time and Opportunity

Property Ownership for Women Enriches, Empowers and Protects

 

(656.78 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Toward Achieving Gender Equality and Empowering Women

Toward Achieving Gender Equality and Empowering Women

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2005

Gender equality and women’s empowerment is the third Millennium Development Goal (MDG) and must be integrated into each of the MDGs if all the development goals are to be met. The world community has the knowledge and technology to reduce gender inequalities and empower women. The U.N. Millennium Project’s Task Force on Education and Gender Equality has outlined seven strategic priorities that require action to meet Goal 3. This brief discusses these issues and includes excerpts from Taking Action: Achieving Gender Equality and Empowering Women, the 2005 report of the U.N. Millennium Project Task Force on Education and Gender Equality.

(258.58 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Seven Priorities, Seven Years to Go: Progress on Achieving Gender Equality

Seven Priorities, Seven Years to Go: Progress on Achieving Gender Equality

Caren Grown, Geeta Rao Gupta, Aslihan Kes
2008

This brief assesses progress toward Millennium Development Goal 3, promote gender equality and empower women, by analyzing changes in the 12 indicators proposed by the U.N. Millennium Project Task Force on Education and Gender Equality and offers recommendations that can redouble global efforts to fulfill this worthy goal.

(845.02 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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Property Ownership for Women Enriches, Empowers and Protects

Property Ownership for Women Enriches, Empowers and Protects
Toward Achieving the Third Millennium Development Goal to Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2005

This series explores those social, cultural and economic factors that could encourage progress toward achieving the third Millennium Development Goal to promote gender equality and empower women. Topics include decreasing violence against women, improving infrastructure and encouraging women's property ownership.

Other publications in this series:
Infrastructure Shortfalls Cost Poor Women Time and Opportunity

Violence Against Women Must Stop

(1.01 MB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

Infrastructure Shortfalls Cost Poor Women Time and Opportunity

Infrastructure Shortfalls Cost Poor Women Time and Opportunity
Toward Achieving the Third Millennium Development Goal to Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2005

This series explores those social, cultural and economic factors that could encourage progress toward achieving the third Millennium Development Goal to promote gender equality and empower women. Topics include decreasing violence against women, improving infrastructure and encouraging women's property ownership.

Other publications in this series:
Property Ownership for Women Enriches, Empowers and Protects

Violence Against Women Must Stop

(684.72 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

Terms and Conditions »

Fostering Dialogue to Break the Cycle of Intergenerational Poverty

Fostering Dialogue to Break the Cycle of Intergenerational Poverty

International Center for Research on Women (ICRW)
2003

In addition to taking a narrow focus on income, poverty issues have typically been examined with a focus on discrete groups, such as children, women, rural, or indigenous people. In contrast, a broader focus on the interconnectedness of the lives of poor mothers, fathers, and children can lead to a greater understanding of the chronic poverty that is transmitted from one generation to the next. Meeting global poverty reduction goals will therefore require a closer look at how and why children born into poor families become poor adults and then raise children who also become trapped in a life of poverty. The Intergenerational Dialogue Project described in this report builds on this perspective, with the goals of expanding knowledge of and solutions to the transmission of poverty from one generation to the next.

(625.51 KB)

We encourage the use and dissemination of our publications for non-commercial, educational purposes. Portions may be reproduced with acknowledgment to the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW). For questions, please contact publications@icrw.org; or (202) 797-0007.

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