Thursday, 24 September 2009

A Cause for the Century

A Cause for the Century


If the world invests in women and girls, women and girls will take care of the world, so said American activist Jane Roberts. The connection between women’s human rights, gender equality and social and economic development is well documented.

At Crossroads we’ve seen this first hand — from West African women who have moved from subsistence to making a living wage through CCI supported cooperatives producing shea butter, soap and textiles, to members of CCI supported Bolivian communal banks where women like Martha Ali reflect “my children study with what I earn.” The investment is modest, but the difference made in lives of women and their families is almost incalculable. Five years ago, Canadian Crossroads International focused its resources in part to strengthen women’s rights. It became clear that to achieve our goals, from building local economies, reducing poverty and to fighting AIDS a common thread linked our strategies — the empowerment of women.
Now after years of talking about of gender equality, some are calling the fight for the rights of women and girls, the cause of the century.

On September 14, 2009 the United Nations passed a resolution to establish a powerful new UN agency to advance the rights of women. A week later Plan International released a report that makes a convincing case that investment in girls will break the cycle of intergenerational poverty and failure to do so could cost the world poorest countries billions in economic growth.

Yet, over the last decade, funding for women’s organizations has decreased in quality and quantity. The Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID), which tracks funding for women’s rights, attributes this to a global trend of “gender mainstreaming” which has resulted in diluting specific objectives on women’s equality amid broader development objectives.

In Canada too, it is increasingly evident that despite our strong policy guidelines, both the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and many Canadian Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) working internationally have reduced commitments to gender equality programming over the last decade. A number of organizations, Canadian Crossroads International among them, analyzed CIDA’s recent evaluation of its policy on gender equality between 1998 and 2005 in a report entitled Strengthening Canada’s International Leadership in the Promotion of Gender Equality. While the organizations were impressed with the rigour of the evaluation, and in fact whole heartedly support the policy, it is clear that increased investment — both in the way of funds for women gender equality specific programming and in political will — is required.

And the timing might be right. Globally, momentum is growing. In 2008 the Dutch government launched the MDG3 Fund in part to make up for a dramatic decrease in funding for women’s programs. That same year NIKE foundation launched the influential girl effect campaign backed up by more than $100-million in financial support for girls programs. This year, Spain kick started UNIFEM’s Fund for Gender Equality with $65-million in funding. And last week, Canada’s Belinda Stronach announced that the Belinda Stronach Foundation, with the Clinton Global Initiative, will bring together leading national and international organizations with a goal of elevating the advancement of girls and women to the G8's agenda.

The case for support is strong. According to the World Bank, when 10 percent more girls go to secondary school, the country’s economy grows by three per cent according to the World Bank. And when a girl earns income, she reinvests 90 per cent in her family.

This is a bandwagon worth boarding. Already many Canadian and International organizations are redirecting resources to invest in women and girls. Canada should do the same. As host of the G20 and the G8 in June 2010 Canada has unprecedented opportunity to reassert itself as a leader in human rights. The lives of more than 500-million girls and young women depend on it.

Learn more about how your gift to Canadian Crossroads International’s women’s right projects can make a world of difference.


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