2,004 research outputs found
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Gender mainstreaming and EU climate change policy
This article uses feminist institutionalism to examine how gender mainstreaming has been sidelined in European Union (EU) climate change policy. It finds that, with a few exceptions largely emanating from the European Parliament's Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality, EU responses to climate change are gender-blind. This is despite the Treaty obligations to gender mainstream policy in all areas and despite the intersections between climate change and development policy, which is renowned for having taken gender equality and women's empowerment seriously and for instigating gender mainstreaming and specific actions as a means to achieve them. The persistent invisibility of gender can be attributed to various forms of institutional resistance
Increasing women's representation in France and India
Cet article prĂ©sente la question de la reprĂ©sentation politique des femmes en France et en Inde. Tout dâabord, il vise Ă mettre en Ă©vidence comment la reprĂ©sentation des femmes Ă©tait inscrite Ă lâagenda politique de chaque pays. Ensuite, il propose un examen critique des arguments utilisĂ©s pour justifier la demande dâune meilleure reprĂ©sentation ainsi que de ceux pour sây opposer. Enfin, il considĂšre les conclusions que lâon peut tirer de ces deux cas. DĂ©passant les cadres comparatifs traditionnels utilisĂ©s par les fĂ©ministes occidentales et en contestant lâinsistance française sur l'idĂ©e d'une France unique, cet article identifie les particularismes et les points communs de chaque cas, pour tenter dâatteindre Ă ce que Shirin Rai appelle âun dĂ©passement enracinĂ© des frontiĂšres culturelles, historiques et politiques.â (Rai, 2000: 15)
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Transforming lives? CONCORD Report EU Gender Action Plan II: from implementation to impact
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Agenda setting, agenda blocking and policy silence: why is there no EU policy on prostitution?
The EU has expanded its policy remit into all kinds of areas, and has made a clear commitment to gender equality. However, issues such as prostitution, abortion and same-sex families, which many would argue are closely linked to gender equality, have remained absent from the EU policy agenda. This article takes the case of prostitution, and asks how we explain the EUâs policy silence on this issue, despite its clear action on the closely related issue of trafficking in human beings (the 2011 Anti-Trafficking Directive (European Parliament & The Council, 2011); the appointment of an Anti-Trafficking Coordinator; and the Strategy towards the Eradication of Trafficking in Human Beings (2012-2016) (European Commission, 2012)). Using a combination of process tracing and document analysis, it examines how prostitution has been kept off the policy agenda; how it has been framed as a policy issue; which actors have been able to define the issue, and which have been excluded. The article contributes to a broader understanding of why some issues become defined as problems requiring public policy responses and others do not; how they appear on, or are excluded from, the policy agenda at the member state and EU level; and how issues, frames and proposals are ignored or actively silenced within policymaking structures and processes
La violence Ă lâĂ©gard des femmes fondĂ©e sur le genre dans la France contemporaine: bilan de la politique relative aux violences conjugales et aux mariages forcĂ©s depuis la Convention dâIstanbul
In 2014, France ratified the Council of Europeâs Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (the Istanbul Convention) and passed the Law for Equality between Women and Men to bring French law into line with it. The Law for Equality between Women and Men situates the fight against violence against women within a broader context of the need to address inequalities between women and men. This is not new at the international level, but it is new to France. When the structural, transformative understandings of violence against women found in international texts are translated into national laws, policy documents and implementation on the ground, they might challenge widespread ideas about gender relations, or they might be diluted in order to achieve consensus. To what extent has French violence against women policy moved into line with United Nations (UN) and Council of Europe initiatives which present violence against women as both a cause and a consequence of gendered power relations? Have internationally accepted concepts of gender and gender-based violence been incorporated into French policy debates and, if so, how? What implications, if any, does all this have for the continued struggle in France and elsewhere to eliminate violence against women?
Résumé
En 2014, la France ratifie la Convention du Conseil de lâEurope sur la prĂ©vention et la lutte contre la violence Ă lâĂ©gard des femmes et la violence domestique (dite Convention dâIstanbul) et adopte dans la foulĂ©e la loi pour lâĂ©galitĂ© rĂ©elle entre les femmes et les hommes afin de mettre en conformitĂ© la lĂ©gislation française. Cette loi place la lutte contre les violences faites aux femmes dans un contexte de lutte contre les inĂ©galitĂ©s de genre. Si cela est loin dâĂȘtre une nouveautĂ© Ă lâĂ©chelle internationale, cela lâest en France. Lorsque les conceptions structurelles et transformatrices des violences faites aux femmes prĂ©sentes dans les textes internationaux sont traduites Ă lâĂ©chelle nationale en lois, documents dâorientation et mesures de mise en Ćuvre sur le terrain, elles peuvent alors remettre en question des idĂ©es largement rĂ©pandues sur les rapports de genre, ou au contraire ĂȘtre Ă©dulcorĂ©es afin dâaboutir Ă un consensus. Dans quelle mesure la politique de la France relative aux violences faites aux femmes sâest-elle alignĂ©e sur les initiatives de lâONU et du Conseil de lâEurope qui prĂ©sentent ce type de violences comme Ă©tant Ă la fois une cause et une consĂ©quence des rapports de force liĂ©s au genreâ? Le genre et la violence fondĂ©e sur le genre, qui sont des concepts internationalement reconnus, ont-ils Ă©tĂ© intĂ©grĂ©s dans les dĂ©bats politiques français, et si oui, de quelle maniĂšreâ? Quelles en sont les implications le cas Ă©chĂ©ant sur la poursuite, en France et ailleurs, de la lutte pour Ă©liminer les violences faites aux femmesâ
Gender and politics in modern and contemporary France
This chapter examines the theme of gender in modern and contemporary French politics. The chapter traces the development of the role of women in the French political sphere since 1944, including the parity laws designed to ensure that 50% of all political candidates at all electoral levels in France are women. The chapter argues that whilst there have been inroads in greater gender parity in legislative elections for the National Assembly, other elections, especially on a local level, have not witnessed this same parity. Indeed, the chapter demonstrates that although women are better represented on electoral bodies in France today than in the recent past, parity has above all favoured women from the same socio-economic elite as male politicians. The chapter argues that there is still some way to go to enabling the French political sphere to reflect the wider diversity of the French population
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Gender equality in European Union development policy in times of crisis
Gender equality is firmly established on the EU development policy agenda. However, a series of inter-related crises, including migration, security and climate change, are becoming more prominent in EU development policy. This article asks whether development objectives have been subsumed under these crisis-driven EU priorities; whether this is compatible with efforts to achieve gender equality and womenâs empowerment through development cooperation; and whether it will affect the ability to keep gender equality high on the EUâs development policy agenda. The theoretical framework draws on horizontal policy coordination and nexuses. The analysis of EU development policy documents shows how migration, security and climate change are constructed as crises; how they intersect in various nexuses; and how gender intersects with each of these nexuses. This research finds that gender equality is absent from the migration-security-climate nexuses, which are increasingly driving development policy priorities. The article argues that it is quite straightforward to keep gender equality on the development policy agenda, but it is difficult retain a focus on gender equality when multiple policy areas intersect. The research suggests that the discourse of crisis has blocked the way, and this will have an impact on the EUâs internal and external activities
EU external climate policy
Climate change is a key priority for European Union external action, and the EU is an important global climate actor. The EU is also committed to mainstreaming the goal of gender equality throughout all of its internal and external activities. However, EU external climate policy remains largely gender blind. This chapter draws on feminist institutionalism and on the literature on policy integration, including gender mainstreaming, to show how and why gender is excluded from EU external climate policy. It asks, firstly, where, in external climate policy, do we find references to gender and what, if anything, do they contribute to achieving gender-just climate policy. Secondly, it asks how feminist institutionalism and policy integration studies can help us understand why gender equality is not mainstreamed in EU external policy and what institutional obstacles prevent its integration. It argues that gender has been excluded from EU external climate policy by a combination of institutional power struggles; a discourse of crisis and security, which pushes gender into the background; and a proliferation of nexuses and mainstreaming imperatives in which the Treaty obligation to mainstream gender is pushed to one side
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