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Gender
Equality and Plan
Plan International
Zimbabwe
February 22, 2005
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Introduction
Plan
believes that gender equality is central to achieving its Vision
and Mission. Boys and girls have the same rights but face many different
obstacles in accessing these rights as a result of their gender.
Through our daily work, we see the negative impacts on boys and
girls of gender-based discrimination, gender power relations and
the denial of women's rights. Like many other international development
organisations, Plan was inspired by the activities surrounding the
Fourth World Conference on Women, held in Beijing in 1995, to take
a closer look at the impact of gender inequality on its work with
children. Ten years on, the Beijing+10 Review has encouraged us
to reflect on our progress so far and to re-assess our strategies
for promoting gender equality.
This document
outlines Plan's journey over the past 10 years to institutionalise
gender. It provides examples of institutional strategies that have
been put in place as well as case studies from our program work
to address gender-based inequalities. It describes our efforts to
think about child poverty in relation to rights and to make the
linkages between child rights and women's rights. It should be clear
that Plan has recognised the cross-cutting nature of gender and
has made progress towards reducing gender-based discrimination through
its projects. Still, there is much more that could be done. This
document highlights some of the recently launched initiatives to
improve Plan's performance on gender, not least our protocol on
gender equality.
Contents
- Gender equality
in Plan
- Gender equality
and child poverty
- Gender equality
and child centred community development
- Gender equality
and child rights
- Plan’s vision
of ‘gender equality’
- Our journey
so far
- Institutionalising
gender
- Working from
the inside out: organisational culture
- Gender analysis
in the program/project cycle
- A gender
audit tool
- Putting it
into practice
- Child mortality
- Health and
nutrition
- Reproductive
health and maternal mortality
- HIV/AIDS
- Gender-based
violence
- Education
- Microfinance
- Water and
environmental sanitation
- Community
awareness raising on gender equality
- Concluding
remarks
- Annexes
- Annex 1:
Child centred community development approach
- Annex 2:
Gender equality protocol
- Annex 3:
Abbreviations and glossary of terms
- Annex 4:
Sources of information
Reproductive
health and maternal mortality
Plan
is aware of the profound impact of gender inequality on reproductive
health and maternal morality. Because it is women and girls who
get pregnant and give birth, the risk factors and exposures to ill
health are gender-differentiated from the outset, with the burden
being much greater for women. Many of the health issues related
to sex and sexuality depend on the nature of men’s and women’s relationships
with each other. Often, for economic, political and social reasons,
women and girls have less power in relationships and are therefore
not in a position to protect themselves against unwanted sex, from
transmission of infections or from violence, or even to gain information
about reproductive health and rights.
A woman dies
in pregnancy or childbirth every minute, leaving an estimated one
million or more children motherless each year. These children are
up to 10 times more likely to die before their second birthday than
children with both parents alive. Among the contributing reasons
for poor maternal health are:
- inequality
of control of household economic resources
- inequality
in the right to make decisions
- inequality
in freedom of movement outside the household
- poor quality
or non-existent health services
There are many
programs facilitated by Plan over the years that seek to improve
community reproductive health services for women and girls. More
recently, Plan has focused attention on strengthening community
understanding of men’s and boys’ roles in enhancing women’s and
girls’ sexual and reproductive health and rights. The Uganda case
study below demonstrates Plan’s efforts to look more holistically
at the underlying causes of women’s and girls’ reproductive ill-health,
moving away from a medical focus alone to explore the impact of
gender power relations and discrimination. Another example is the
‘male motivation’ project in Zimbabwe which describes Plan’s efforts
to engage men and boys to promote the equality and rights of women
and girls.
Zimbabwe
The
‘male motivation’ project undertaken by Plan Zimbabwe in partnership
with the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC) and others
proved the positive impact male involvement can have on improving
women’s lives and health.
A ZNFPC assessment
in the Chiredzi area in 1992 showed that almost three-quarters (72
per cent) of men did not approve of family planning because they
knew little about it and the methods available. Over half believed
that family planning was a woman’s business because programs were
targeted at them and women were trained as service providers.
"Men are
pushed aside and made to feel like strangers," was a common
reaction. At the same time, two-thirds (64 per cent) of the women
said that the husbands decided on whether or not his wife used contraception
and three-quarters of men and women said that they never discussed
family planning with their spouses.
The aim of the
‘male motivation’ project, therefore, was to educate men and women
about family planning and so increase the use of family planning
methods. It deliberately set out to include men as well as women,
not just to encourage more use of condoms or vasectomies but also
in the wider sense of persuading them to encourage and support their
partners and peers to use family planning.
Under the campaign
theme ‘Endhla wanuna – longa ndangu wawena (Be a man – plan
your family)’, the project employed a wide range of awareness-raising
tools to get the messages across and promote joint family planning
decision-making between men and women. These included talks for
men, home visits, community theatre, awareness raising in schools
and condom distribution. Posters and leaflets were produced, some
aimed at men, some at women and some at couples. Campaign messages
also appeared on banners, t-shirts and stickers, and a local music
group even wrote a song reinforcing the theme of male involvement
in family planning.
Equally important
was to gain the support of community leaders, religious leaders
and influential government figures, some of whom participated at
some of the project activities, drawing large crowds and media attention.
The campaign activities were led by a group of 30 specially trained
male motivators chosen by the community.
An evaluation
of the impact of the project on behaviour, knowledge and attitude
among community members was conducted at the end. Among the main
findings were that:
- up to 78
per cent of the targeted population had been reached
- contraceptive
use, particularly of the pill and condom, had increased
- 80 per cent
of men and 93 per cent of women discussed family planning issues
and saw family planning decisions as a joint couple responsibility
- 84 per cent
of married women said that their partners approved of their use
of contraception
- 77 per cent
of men and women said that they had made an informed choice on
their current contraceptive method and 88 per cent were recommending
their relatives and friends to use contraception
- 75 per cent
of women believed that contraceptive use had improved their lifestyle
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