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The following documents were recently added to the website. Please visit regularly for new uploads.

 

Impact of Gender Budgeting on Women Empowerment

 

UNIFEM's work in support of gender responsive budgeting  

 

Budget Support: As good as the strategy it finances

 

 

Gender and Participatory Budgeting- DFID

 

 

Application of the gender policy marker by German Bilateral Development Agencies

 

 

Morocco Gender Report 2008

 

 

How do DAC statistics measure gender equality focused aid?

 

 

Gender Budgeting Guidelines and Analytical Tools at local level in Uganda

 

 

Genre et décentralisation au Sénégal

 

 

Rapport du Séminaire sur la prise en compte du genre dans le travail parlementaire- Burundi 2008

 

 

Gender Budgets: an overview- Canada

 

 

 

 

 

WHAT IS GRB?

"Gender responsive budgeting (GRB) is about ensuring that government budgets and the policies and programs that underlie them address the needs and interests of individuals that belong to different social groups. Thus, GRB looks at biases that can arise because a person is male or female, but at the same time considers disadvantage suffered as a result of ethnicity, caste, class or poverty status, location and age. GRB is not about separate budgets for women or men nor about budgets divided equally. It is about determining where the needs of men and women are the same, and where they differ. Where the needs are different, allocations should be different."

 

Debbie Budlender 2006

 

Gender Responsive Budget Initiatives Brochure   11265717583genbud_small.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NEW! GRB VIDEOS

 

MOROCCO

 

phpthumb.jpgGender-responsive budgeting is a crucial tool for women’s empowerment. In Morocco, UNIFEM has worked with the government to create a more tailored approach in which budgeting can have a more effective and immediate impact. As this documentary illustrates, when the needs of women living in a particular geographical and cultural context are addressed, the entire community benefits. In the past four years, the Finance Ministry of Morocco has made substantial progress in developing both gender-responsive and results-oriented budgetary reform.

 

 

 

Click here to watch Morocco video

 

 

BOLIVIA

 

In Cochabamba, Bolivia, UNIFEM has made significant strides in teaching local women how to seek local government funding for projects that can benefit them. UNIFEM developed and sponsored local workshops in which women were educated on the city budget: where government money comes from, how it is distributed, and what strategies to use in applying for government funds. The workshops helped the women envision a new potential for what they can do for themselves, and helped them better understand what kinds of demands they can make on their own government.

 

 

Click here to watch Bolivia video

 

 

INDIA

Incorporating a gender perspective in government budgets can ensure that resources are allocated towards women's priorities to eliminate gender gaps. This can be achieved through women's participation in budget policymaking and gender budget analysis. This video presents show how this is working in practice in a GRB initiative supported by UNIFEM in Mysore, India.

 

 

 

Click here to watch India video

 

 

 

Africa
Kenya PDF Print E-mail

 

Title: Kenya

Author: UNIFEM

Date: 2001-2003

The report highlights the progress of the Collaborative Center for Gender and Development in Kenya in the area of gender budgeting in both national and other macro-economic processes. In addition UNIFEM, DFID and CIDA supported the Center to strategize on gender budgeting priorities. GTZ have also supported FEMNET to undertake a study on gender budgets and macro-economic in Kenya. These processes have given rise to the Gender Mainstreaming in the National Budget, seeking to influence the national resource allocation process from within the Ministry of Finance and Planning. In the past, the Center has held numerous sensitization forums and mobilized women leaders and women's organizations to engage in debate around national budgeting.
Expected outcomes are to create support strategies for increasing women's participation in economic decision-making through their engagement in budgetary processes. Ensuring that gender responsive budgeting is placed on the agendas of organizations engaging in governance and economic reform ia also expected.

Read more...
 
Mozambique GRB Work: a case study PDF Print E-mail

 

This case study was compiled by Debbie Budlender based on a presentation by Cecilia Ncube, Programme Officer at UNIFEM Mozambique, at a workshop on GRB organized by UNIFEM and UNFPA in Cape Town, April 2006.

 

GRB Work in Mozambique: a case study

 
Nigeria PDF Print E-mail

 

Title: Nigeria

Author: UNIFEM

Date: 2001-2005

This report details the work in progress in Nigeria on gendered budget analysis at the national and local levels. Governance has emerged as a major issue for development in the West African sub-region, especially in Anglophone West Africa where, after decades of military rule and wars, governments are beginning to democratize. In Nigeria, 1999 marked the beginning of a new experiment with democracy after years of disruptive military rule. One of the major tasks faced by the new civilian and democratic government is reforming Nigeria's institutions at the executive, legislative and judicial levels to ensure that corruption and lack of accountability that was characteristic of previous Nigerian regimes are tackled, human rights of people respected, and democracy allowed to flourish.

Women in Nigeria see the current political climate as an opportunity to follow up on the three important reviews concerning gender equality: the 10-year reviews of the Beijing World Conference on Women, the International Conference on Population and Development, and the World Summit on Social Development. This has once again provided an opportunity for Nigerian women to critically appraise their government, not only in terms of creating an enabling environment for women to participate fully in governance, but also for demanding gender equality policies for economic prosperity and social development. This ultimately will contribute to defining a new and just political agenda, incorporating elements of government transparency and accountability in socio-economic policies, expenditure and social impact.
Read more...
 
Senegal PDF Print E-mail

 

Title: Senegal

Author: UNICEF

Date: 2005 

This report outlines the outputs, activities, future plans and findings to date, from the national level gender budget initiative in Senegal. Over the few last years, Senegal has gone through significant political change, with a major shift in the political leadership. The new government is supportive of women’s participation at decision-making levels, and women's representation in strategic ministerial positions has increased. However, despite growing trends towards participatory democracy, women’s contribution in the economy continues to be undermined and women’s work in the care economy remains invisible in national accounts and budget mechanisms.

The Government is also committed to attracting foreign direct investment as a way of sustaining growth and fighting unemployment. Given this emphasis on promoting an enabling environment for private businesses, it is crucial to monitor the implication of such policy shifts on the allocation of national budgets.

Read more...
 
Tanzania PDF Print E-mail

 

Title: Tanzania

Author: UNIFEM

Date: 2002-2005 

This report highlights the progress of the Tanzania Gender Networking programme (TGNP) and its coalition Feminist Activism (FemAct). The gender budget initiative was developed in the context of cost sharing and retrenchment policies implemented as part of the structural adjustment programmes (SAPs) in the 1980s. The SAPs precipitated cuts in vital social services particularly health care and education, while liberalisation and privatisation caused massive layoffs of government workers. Concurrently, the majority of civil society was left out in terms of policymaking and budgetary decisions in the country. The PRSP process in Tanzania began in 2000.

Read more...
 
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