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INTEGRATION OF GENDER INTO MCA-N COMPACT MCA-N ESA Team 17 May 2011 MCA Namibia

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MCA Namibia. Integration of Gender into MCA-N Compact MCA-N ESA Team 17 May 2011. Gender! . What is it? Refers to social roles, responsibilities & relations between men & women The gender roles of women & men are socially constructed Gender vs. affirmative action. Definition. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: MCA Namibia

INTEGRATION OF GENDER INTO MCA-N COMPACT

M C A- N ESA Te a m

1 7 M ay 2 0 1 1

MCA Namibia

Page 2: MCA Namibia

Gender!

What is it?

Refers to social roles, responsibilities & relations between men & women

The gender roles of women & men are socially constructed

Gender vs. affirmative action

Page 3: MCA Namibia

The term gender refers to culturally based expectations of the roles

and behaviours of males and females. The term distinguishes the

socially constructed from the biologically determined aspects of

being male and female. Unlike the biology of sex, gender roles and

behaviours can change historically, sometimes relatively quickly, even

if aspects of these roles originated in the biological differences

between the sexes.

Because the religious or cultural traditions thatdefine and justify the distinct roles and expected

behaviours of malesand females are strongly cherished and socially enforced,

change ingender systems often is contested. In some countries, there

aregroups which seek to impose more stringent divisions

between malesand females than currently exist, while feminist movements

seek toreduce or eradicate these divisions.

Definition

Page 4: MCA Namibia

Lessons learnt

males and females have unequal rights, resources, and voice in decision making in almost all countries, including the developed countries

the average extent of the gender gap varies from region to region and from country to country

gender disparities tend to be greater in low-income than in higher-income countries

within countries, disparities are greater among the poor than in the well strata of society.

the nature of gender inequalities varies from region to region and country to country, and from community to community within a country.

Page 5: MCA Namibia

Gender inequalities

roles and responsibilities or gender based division of labour

Gender based disparities in access and control of resources

Gender biases in rights and entitlements

expectations and identities

have an impact on development, economic growth and poverty reduction ……..

Page 6: MCA Namibia

Gender inequalities ….

• Acts to undermine economic growth

• Reduces the well being of men, women & children

• Contributes to poverty

Take a note of examples around you or in your community…

Page 7: MCA Namibia

GRN and Gender

GRN – very committed to ensure: gender issues integration into all laws, policies & Programmes MGECW

National Gender Policy – NGP National Gender plan of Action – NGPA

Page 8: MCA Namibia

NGP

Prioritise gender balance in power and decision making Aims at improving women participation in politics and

decision making For achieving transparency & accountability in GRN For new perspective and experiences to political agenda For social & economical development

Awareness and attitude change

Page 9: MCA Namibia

NGPA

• Promote & facilitate equal representation of women & men at all levels of the decision making structures at national, regional and community levels

• Build capacity of women in management & leadership positions

• Change negative attitudes towards gender equality

• Increase awareness of negative practices that inhibit women's participation on power sharing at all levels of society

Page 10: MCA Namibia

NGPA – some results

Namibian Women Parliamentary Causus – 1996 Promote gender sensitive legislations Greater role for women in the Namibia Parliament

50/50 Campaign Gender equality in political representation (Sister

Namibia)

Awareness campaign

Page 11: MCA Namibia

NPD3 Goal indicators, Baseline, Targets Indicators Basel

ine %Targets %

Women in PoliticsParliament 27 50Local Authorities 45 50

Women in decision making positions

in

GRN 33 50Parastatals 21 50Private Sector 33 50

Women in informal sector 53 60Women owning SMEs 38 45

Ration of girls (women) to boys (men) enrolled:

Primary Education 100 100+Secondary Education 100 100+Tertiary Education (UNAM & PoN)

100 100+

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MCC’s Environmental Guidelines are inclusive of assessing social and gender impacts and risks of

negative impacts.

Since Oct. 2006, MCC has a policy on how gender analysis will be integrated into the Compact

development process.

MCC and Gender

Page 13: MCA Namibia

MCC’s Gender Policy based on growing evidence that gender inequality is a constraint to growth and poverty reduction.

Incorporating gender = economic and project effectiveness argument.

Lack of understanding of gender differences can lead to ineffective or biased project design

• roles and responsibilities • access and control of resources

MCC and Gender

Page 14: MCA Namibia

Gender Policy:Integration of gender

into all stages of development and implementation of

Compact.

MCC and Gender

Requires eligible countries to utilize an analysis of gender differences and inequalities to inform the development, design, implementation, and monitoring of MCC-funded

programs.

Page 15: MCA Namibia

MCC and Gender• Compact Implementation

MCA-N Responsibilities in Compact Implementation

Ensure that sex-disaggregated data will be analyzed in monitoring performance and results and evaluating impacts.

Where projects have specifically addressed gender differences and inequalities in design, countries will monitor gender indicators

Page 16: MCA Namibia

MCC Responsibilities in Compact Implementation

MCC will integrate gender into its oversight and assessment of a country’s performance during implementation

MCC will assess the extent to which Compact programs reflect findings on gender differences and inequalities and meet intended

gender outcomes

Some disbursements of MCA funds may be conditioned upon the satisfaction of targets and progress on indicators measuring

project performance

MCC and Gender

Page 17: MCA Namibia

MCC and GenderMCC 2009 Gender Review

• When MCC/A social and gender staff engage early, there is improved quality of gender integration in contractor deliverables

• Provide regular training for MCC and MCA staff on the gender policy implementation

• Increase female participation in MCC-funded projects, by focusing at an early stage on project design, outreach, or execution of plans with the appropriate capacity and staff

Page 18: MCA Namibia

MCC Gender Review: Public Commitments

• Ensure that the MCAs have social assessment and gender competency on their staff during compact development and implementation.

• Annual social and gender assessment training will be offered for all MCC staff and will be mandatory for all new MCC employees.

• MCAs in new compact countries will be expected to engage social assessment specialists with gender expertise at an early stage

• Provide training for all MCA staff on gender and other social issues. • Gender integration will become part of all implementation workshops in

compact countries. • Gender integration will be a recurring topic at MCC University,

• Updates on gender integration will formally be included in every internal MCC quarterly country portfolio review.

MCC and Gender

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MCA-N Gender sensitive activities

INPCBRLMCommunal land supportConservancy support

Gender issues at MCA-N Office?

Page 20: MCA Namibia

What has been and can be done at activity level?

What has been done?Gender training for decision makers – Traditional

Authorities; Communal Land Boards; Senior Headmen and a training module / manual was developed and translated in local languages.

INP PPO also planned / done three (3) modules focusing on gender namely gender action learning system, gender for management committees public speaking / communication skills.

Encourage inclusion and participation of women and vulnerable groups in all MCA-N activities.

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What has been and can be done Cont’d

Reviewed project proposals, inception report and advised Contractors / Grantees to ensure women and vulnerable people are participating / benefiting in their various activities.

Our Community Land Support has started with the process of amending the application process for applying for land to enable women and vulnerable groups to acquire land.

Gender Integration Plans developed by various contractors and currently being implemented.

Page 22: MCA Namibia

What has been and can be done Cont’d

Production of materials such as comic and photo banks which could be used for a reporting as well as publication;

INP PPO have / will also be conducting a training for PPOs, training of community consultations as well as monitoring of field support.

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What has been and can be done Cont’d

What can be done?Each project / sub activities / contactors / grantees

put more emphasis on implementing gender strategy as per their gender plan or MCA-N GSIS;

Making training times and venues more accessible to women;

Capacity development for women to fully participate;

Using female trainers/field workers;Including areas traditionally of concern to women;

Page 24: MCA Namibia

What has been and can be done Cont’d

What can be done Cont’d:Considering safety issues;Contribute to the MCA-N storyline on gender at

activity level;Report on gender disaggregation (number of

women vs. men) participating on training / meeting (M&E);

Participate and present at the gender workshop with all MCA-N contractors / grantees in September / October 2011;

Share materials / modules / ideas especially for contractors working with the same target groups

Page 25: MCA Namibia

MCA-N Gender Approach: Gender integration

Gender Analysis

Gender Mainstreaming Attention to gender equality to become the centre of

all interventions

Gender sensitive indicators Demonstrates changes in roles and relations Assesses the progress towards gender equality

considerations

Page 26: MCA Namibia

Gender Analysis

Understanding of women and men’s roles and relations

Base for developing better targeted development interventions for both women & man needs and constraints

Main requirement

Page 27: MCA Namibia

Examples

Determine if the project benefits are structured to be accessible by women and vulnerable groups

Study the degree to which activities may inadvertently lead to additional inequitable or “elite capture” of benefits

Assessment of who contributes and who benefits, using appropriate tools. Consider divergent interests between men and women; young and old; more and less powerful

Construction teams and local communities participate in HIV and AIDS prevention, care and treatment programs with attention to drivers of the epidemic.

Identify any specific gender inequality (e.g. property rights, access rights, inheritance rights, etc.) and plan accordingly

Page 28: MCA Namibia

Gender Mainstreaming

Safeguards are needed to ensure that MCA-N investment

i) Does not adversely affect vulnerable groups,

ii) Provides access to training, grants and other benefits that is equitable

Page 29: MCA Namibia

What hinders equal participation and gender equality in Namibia?

Equality under the lawAddressing norms and

behaviors and cultureEqual access to and

control over income and productive resources,

Equal access to education

Autonomy to make life choices, free from fear of violence,

 Equal powers of participation and decision-making.

Page 30: MCA Namibia

Examples of gender-sensitive indicators are:

Quantitative:•Participation of all stakeholders in project identification, design and implementation meetings (attendance and level of participation/contribution by sex, age, and socio-economic background).

•Degree of rural women and men's inputs into project activities, in terms of labor, tools, money, etc.

•Benefits (e.g. increased employment, land registration etc.) are going to women and men, by socio-economic background and age.

Qualitative:•Degree of participation of women in important decision making

Page 31: MCA Namibia

Thank You