UN Chronicle - Volume XLVII - Number 1 - 2010

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Women in Politics The Fight to End Violence Against Women By Theo-Ben Gurirab and Pia Cayetano

D

espite the remarkable progress of women in many professions, politics is not one of them. Indeed, around the world, women have been conspicuous by their absence in decision and policy making in government. When the United Nations First World Conference on Women was held in Mexico City in 1975, the international community was reminded that discrimination against women remained a persistent problem in many countries; and even though governments were called upon to develop strategies to promote the equal participation of women, political participation was not yet identified as a priority. Since then, though there has been an increasing focus on women’s representation and their impact on decision-making structures, the increased attention did not reflect in immediate results. For example, in 1975 women accounted for 10.9 per cent of parliamentarians worldwide; ten years later it increased by one mere percentage point to 11.9 per cent. It was not until the World Conference to Review and Appraise the Achievements of the United Nations Decade for Women: Equality, Development and Peace, held in 1985 in Nairobi, that governments and parliaments pledged to promote gender equality in all areas of political life. The initiatives were further consolidated ten years later in the Beijing Plan of Action adopted at the Fourth World Conference on Women. It was also at this conference that violence against women was identified as an obstacle to the advancement of women requiring specific attention. Since the Beijing Plan of Action, women’s representation in parliaments and impact on political decision making has

been the subject of much attention. The Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), which has been engaged in research and the collection of data on women in parliaments, threw its weight behind United Nations initiatives to achieve women’s full ­participation in politics. Although articulated many times, IPU’s commitment at its best was perhaps seen in its statement in 1992: “The concept of democracy will only achieve true and dynamic significance when political policies and national legislation are decided jointly by men and women with equitable regard for the interests and aptitudes of both halves of the population.”

The concept of democracy will only achieve true and dynamic significance when political policies and national legislation are decided jointly by men and women with equitable regard for the interests and aptitudes of both halves of the population.

Theo-Ben Gurirab is President of the Inter-Parliamentary Union

and Speaker of the National Assembly of the Republic of Namibia and former Prime Minister. Pia Cayetano is a senator from the Philippines and President of the IPU Coordinating Committee of Women Parliamentarians. UN CHRONICLE    No. 1    2010

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