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African
Union gender policy
African
Union
September 21, 2008
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Historical
Background
Part I
Introduction
Forces of globalization
are dissolving old boundaries in a network of dialogue, awareness,
information and global trade. Desire for localization is bringing
people back to their geographic, ethnic, religious and cultural
roots. The reforms of decentralisation are moving decision-making
and access to services closer to local people. Liberalisation is
creating one vast global marketplace and democratisation is bringing
more people into systems of participatory governance. Protecting
human rights is becoming the common sense of humanity. The leadership
role of women in all spheres of development including their active
participation in the decision-making sphere is becoming more prevalent.
This needs a robust Gender Policy of the African Union that would
shape gender equality and women's empowerment in the 21st
Century
The AU Gender
Policy focuses on closing the gender gap in general and in particular
tackling gender inequalities which have resulted to feminisation
of poverty, and women's disempowerment among other things. The norms
and principles of women's empowerment and the values that
inform these principles are the bedrock of the modern notion of
rights. Development, is about facilitating the meeting of these
needs, and calls for a discussion centered on how these norms (rights)
enable citizens to meet their needs, which in turn enables them
to fulfil their potential. Fostering an enabling environment of
a vast scale for women entrepreneurs, providing easily accessible
reproductive services for women, putting in place legal measures
to protect women and girls and enforcing them, adopting affirmative
action policies, providing special quotas for women in decision
making and tacking harmful traditional and cultural practices among
others demonstrates that there is critical role to be played by
everyone in society society for gender equality to be realized.
It is the result-based and purpose-oriented development process
of any democratic policy that would envision secure, stable and
sustainable livelihoods for all its citizens, men and women, boys
and girls.
While Gender
refers to the communally assembled tasks and duties designated to
men and women of a socio-entity; as a basic organising principle
of communities and polities in their daily interactions the way
this affects both sexes is different. In all of their economic development
actions, chores and relationships men and women contributions depend
greatly on the roles and responsibilities society ascribes to them
and this has a differential impact on their development. Indeed,
gender concerns refer to conditioned behaviour that vastly diverge
among cultures and radically transform itself in time adapting to
political, social, economic and cultural stresses and shocks.
This has the
effect and impact of opening up avenues for economic empowerment,
security from violence and violations, participation and identity,
which incorporates self determination and choice; and social capital
development and participation in community duties, which allows
for artistic expression of various kinds, information and transcendence.
To achieve this, a paradigm shift is inevitable. The gender challenges
facing the African continent require both a paradigm shift and a
systematic approach as envisaged by the African Union Gender Policy
and Action Plan. The Policy underpins the requisite need for identifying
ways and means to foster women's focused interventions such
as the proposed African Women Trust Fund, re-orienting existing
institutions to pay special attention to gender equality and women's
empowerment and building capacity for democratic governance on demand
driven gender needs.
This Policy document constitutes four parts namely Part I which
presents the historical background to gender issues in Africa, Part
II which presents the policy goals, objectives, principles, values
and targets, Part III which presents the gender policy commitments
and Part IV which constitutes the Gender Policy Action Plan to implement
the policy commitments.
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