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Findings from the gender equality module of the 2011 Paris Declaration Survey: Towards HLF-4 Jenny Hedman DAC Network on Gender Equality 28 July 2011
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Background to the gender equality module The Accra Agenda for Action and the DAC Guiding Principles for Aid Effectiveness, Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment (2008) The Paris Declaration Monitoring Survey (2006, 2008, 2011) Ensuring a gender equality dimension in the 2011 Paris Declaration monitoring survey - an optional module with 3 indicators: i. Ownership of gender equality ii. Managing for gender equality results iii. Mutual accountability for gender equality
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Overview of findings 24 of the Paris Declaration survey countries tested the module: Albania, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroun, Cape Verde, Comoros, Democratic Republic of Congo, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Gabon, Honduras, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Moldova, Morocco, Mozambique, Nepal, Niger, Peru, Rwanda, Togo, Zambia. Exchange and dialogue on gender equality.
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Gender equality indicator 1: ownership Selected findings: All national development strategies address gender equality – as a “cross cutting” issue. Half of the 24 countries have identified gender equality objectives, but few have allocated a budget for achieving these. Half are at some stage of implementing GRB. Donors align to partner countries’ gender equality priorities, but do not seem to allocate enough resources to implement their commitments on gender equality.
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Gender equality indicator 2: “results” Selected findings: Data disaggregated by sex are very rarely collected systematically and not necessarily used in decision making. When sex disaggregated data are used as a basis for decision making, this leads to an increased focus on and budget allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment. Donors tend to use, data disaggregated by sex when available, but their support for collecting sex-disaggregated data is limited.
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Gender equality indicator 3: mutual accountability Selected findings: 8 of the 16 countries where broad based dialogue is in place state that gender equality is addressed, or partly addressed, in the dialogue.
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Some key messages for Busan For effective results-management: Both governments and donors need to make use of existing data disaggregated by sex for policy and programme management and decision making. Donors should support country capacity for the collection of data disaggregated by sex.
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Some key messages for Busan Ownership Donors and partner countries need to ensure that resources for gender equality match their policy objectives and commitments. Accountability Donors and partners should systematically address progress against agreed commitments on gender equality in policy dialogue and mutual assessment reviews at the country level.
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Next steps with the module findings Finalise the report: Findings from the gender equality module of the 2011 Paris Declaration Monitoring Survey Use findings for HLF-4 and its outcome document Use findings for possible gender equality indicators in the monitoring framework post-Busan
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Towards HLF-4 Key themes for Busan Module findings identify key issues for some Busan themes, but not all: Results and accountability Aid transparency and predictability Ownership Situations of conflict, fragility and risks Middle income countries / south-south cooperation Leveraging aid for other sources of development finance Future development governance systems and frameworks.
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Towards HLF-4 Identify concrete language on gender equality for the outcome document – going beyond the AAA Aim to present evidence and findings from the module during the first day in Busan Work to identify and provide inputs into high-level sessions in Busan Consider a high-level side event on gender equality in Busan, hosted by Korea What counts are the outcomes.
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www.oecd.org/dac/gender/effectiveness Contact: jenny.hedman@oecd.orgjenny.hedman@oecd.org
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