Women matter
UNWOMEN
This year, the theme for International Women's Day – 'Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a Covid-19 world', celebrates the tremendous efforts by women and girls around the world in shaping a more equal future and recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic and highlights the gaps that remain.
Women's full and effective participation and leadership in all areas of life drives progress for everyone. Yet, women are still underrepresented in public life and decision-making, as revealed in the UN secretary-general's recent report. Women are heads of state or government in 22 countries, and only 24.9 percent of national parliamentarians are women. At the current rate of progress, gender equality among heads of government will take another 130 years.
Women are also at the forefront of the battle against Covid-19, as front-line and health sector workers, as scientists, doctors and caregivers, yet they get paid 11 per cent less globally than their male counterparts. An analysis of Covid-19 task teams from 87 countries found only 3.5 per cent of them had gender parity.
When women lead, we see positive results. Some of the most efficient and exemplary responses to the Covid-19 pandemic were led by women. And women, especially young women, are at the forefront of diverse and inclusive movements online and on the streets for social justice, climate change and equality in all parts of the world. Yet, women under 30 are less than 1 per cent of parliamentarians worldwide.
This is why this year's International Women's Day is a rallying cry for Generation Equality, to act for an equal future for all.
In her statement for International Women's Day, UN Women executive director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka said: “We need women's representation that reflects all women and girls in all their diversity and abilities, and across all cultural, social, economic and political situations. This is the only way we will get real societal change that incorporates women in decision-making as equals and benefits us all.”
This year, the theme for International Women's Day – 'Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a Covid-19 world', celebrates the tremendous efforts by women and girls around the world in shaping a more equal future and recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic and highlights the gaps that remain.
Women's full and effective participation and leadership in all areas of life drives progress for everyone. Yet, women are still underrepresented in public life and decision-making, as revealed in the UN secretary-general's recent report. Women are heads of state or government in 22 countries, and only 24.9 percent of national parliamentarians are women. At the current rate of progress, gender equality among heads of government will take another 130 years.
Women are also at the forefront of the battle against Covid-19, as front-line and health sector workers, as scientists, doctors and caregivers, yet they get paid 11 per cent less globally than their male counterparts. An analysis of Covid-19 task teams from 87 countries found only 3.5 per cent of them had gender parity.
When women lead, we see positive results. Some of the most efficient and exemplary responses to the Covid-19 pandemic were led by women. And women, especially young women, are at the forefront of diverse and inclusive movements online and on the streets for social justice, climate change and equality in all parts of the world. Yet, women under 30 are less than 1 per cent of parliamentarians worldwide.
This is why this year's International Women's Day is a rallying cry for Generation Equality, to act for an equal future for all.
In her statement for International Women's Day, UN Women executive director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka said: “We need women's representation that reflects all women and girls in all their diversity and abilities, and across all cultural, social, economic and political situations. This is the only way we will get real societal change that incorporates women in decision-making as equals and benefits us all.”
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