| No Country in the World
    Treats its Women as Well as its Men. [World] There is not a single country in the
    world today where women have the same opportunities as men, and although progress has been
    made in some areas in recent years, women are still disadvantaged in economic and
    political life. Gender equity is far from being achieved. The opportunities available to
    men and women are unequal in every country in the world. Almost 70% of the world's poor
    are women. The most obvious inequities are seen in the economic and political spheres. The
    exclusion of women is clearly visible in the political sphere. Although they account for
    more than half of the world's population, women occupy only 15% percent of seats in the
    world's parliaments on average. According to international studies, in order for women to
    exercise real influence on political processes, they would have to hold at least 30% of
    political positions. But there are a few countries that exceed this rate, and most of them
    are all in northern Europe: Finland, 
Norway, Sweden 
and 
Denmark. In fact, the presence of
    women in the centres of decision-making power is the only indicator of gender equity that
    does not correlate to a country's level of poverty. In some of the world's wealthiest
    countries, like France 
and Japan, women occupy only 10% to 12% of seats in parliament or
    congress, which is less than the rate of 13% seen in sub-Saharan Africa, the poorest
    region of the planet. At the same time, however, women hold only 6% of the positions in
    national government cabinets worldwide, and it is only in countries like Norway, Sweden
    and Finland that women occupy 
more than 40 percent of ministerial posts. Overall, national
    political decision-makers continue to be overwhelmingly male, and this is often reflected
    in a failure to address issues that concern women. There are 47 U.N. member nations that
    have still not signed or ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
    Discrimination against Women, adopted in 1979, while another 43 countries have only done
    so with reservations, the report notes. When it comes to economic participation, women
    face varying degrees of labour discrimination throughout the world. They have more limited
    access to the labour market, and the average pay for women is lower than it is for men.
    The greatest inequities in both of these regards are seen in the Middle East, North
    Africa, and some Latin American countries, like Chile, Mexico and Peru. Contrary to what
    many might assume, countries do not need high levels of income to eliminate gender
    disparities and offer equal opportunities to women and men. There are some nations facing
    severe poverty that have nonetheless made significant progress in achieving greater gender
    equity.  | 
  
    | Annan
    Draws Fire Over Gender Equality. [World] More than 240 women from over 50 countries
    accused U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan of failing to promote women's rights and of
    neglecting gender equality in his U.N. reform plans. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is
    proposing a shakeup of U.N. management practices. that would create a mobile civil
    service, allow a one-time staff buyout costing about $100,000 per person, modernize
    technology and consider outsourcing. The proposal, to be unveiled Tuesday, is a response
    to last year's investigation into the U.N. oil-for-food program which concluded that the
    U.N.'s shoddy management was partly to blame for widespread corruption. It is also an
    effort to transform the U.N.'s post-World War II management structure and practices so the
    world body can deal with 21st century problems. In an open letter to Annan, the women said
    they were "disappointed and frankly outraged" that strengthening the U.N.
    machinery focusing on women is not a central part of the U.N.'s reform agenda. They also
    expressed deep concern "that the position of women in high-level U.N. posts has
    stagnated." Charlotte Bunch, executive director of the Center for Women's Global
    Leadership, accused Annan of paying lip service to women rights.  | 
  
    | Gender Equality Forgotten in UN
    Reform Process. [UN] In a recent conference on UN reform and human rights, Stephen
    Lewis, the UN Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa criticized how the multilateral system
    is disgorging a high-level panel of fifteen people to look at the re-design of all those
    areas of the United Nations system which so significantly address the lives of women, but
    only three members of the panel are women. As recently as ten days ago, I wasn't at all
    sure what I wanted to say in this luncheon address. Then, on February 16th, the United
    Nations announced the appointment of a new High-Level Panel on UN System-Wide coherence in
    areas of development, humanitarian assistance and environment. My uncertainty was swiftly
    brought to an end. The appointment of the panel was done in response to a fiat delivered
    by the governments of the world during the General Assembly last September. In the
    so-called "Outcomes Document" of that gathering, the Secretary-General was
    'invited' to launch work "to further strengthen the management and coordination of
    United Nations operational activities so that they can make an even more effective
    contribution to the achievement of the 
 Millennium Development Goals, including
    proposals for 
 more tightly-managed entities in the fields of development,
    humanitarian assistance and the environment." Quite a mouthful, although positively
    mellifluous in the literary aesthetics of UN reform. And I may say, just as an aside, that
    if the High-Level Panel ever deigned to seek my opinion, I would love to provide some
    thoughts about the role of some of the multilateral 'entities.' | 
  
    | New
    Light on Female Count. [World] Researchers have found misogyny plays only 
one part in Asia's
    gender imbalance. The mystery of Asia's missing women has taken an intriguing new twist.
    To date, the fact that men greatly outnumber women in countries such as China
 and India
    has been attributed to cultural preferences for males. But it seems that misogyny is only
    part of the picture and a second - biological - culprit has emerged. The missing women
    concept is most famously associated with the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen,
    who noticed that some countries have unusually high sex ratios (the number of males
    relative to females). While the number of men and women in the West is about equal, the
    number of men per 100 women in China and 
India is 107 
and 108, respectively. By comparing
    actual female population figures against the expected female population figures in
    countries with an under-representation of women, Sen estimated that about 100 million
    women were "missing" in Asia. Most research into the cause of the phenomenon has
    focused on misogyny. Studies have found that daughters are discriminated against through a
    number of means including the unfair rationing of food and access to health care. In a
    more recent development, there is also mounting evidence that ultrasound is being used to
    identify and terminate female foetuses. The widely accepted argument has been that females
    are being purposely eliminated before birth or are suffering an excessive mortality rate
    as children. But the case has been reopened by a 
Harvard University postgraduate who
    argues that there is an important biological component to the puzzle of the missing women.
    In an article published in the Journal of Political Economy, Emily Oster claims that
    almost half of the women are not "missing" at all. She argues that the
    under-representation of women is due, in part, to a naturally occurring high sex ratio in
    some Asian countries. Oster provides evidence that pregnant women who are carriers of the
    Hepatitis B virus are 1.5 times more likely to have a baby boy than a baby girl (the
    mechanism is unclear but may be due to a higher rate of miscarriage of female foetuses
    exposed to the virus). By looking at the incidence of the virus in countries with a high
    sex ratio, Oster is able to estimate what proportion of the over-representation of males
    can be explained by Hepatitis B. She finds the virus can account for 45 per cent of all
    missing women, but more interesting are the inter-country differences. While 75 per cent
    of China's missing women are explained 
by Hepatitis B, in India the 
corresponding figure
    is less than 20 per cent. So, while Hepatitis B is an important factor, evidence for the
    role of misogyny in the under-representation of women is still strong, especially in
    India. Alarmingly, the sex ratio in India has continued to increase over the past 15
    years. The greater availability of technologies such as ultrasound is providing a reliable
    and discreet means for parents to exercise control over the sex of their children and
    thereby artificially influence the gender balance in favour of males.  |