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Contested Terrain: Oxfam, Gender, and the Aftermath of War
Oxfam, 2001The topic of gender relations in the context of conflict covers highly sensitive terrain, not only within the war-torn society, but for intervening institutions. Like other international humanitarian agencies, Oxfam Great Britain (GB) has faced difficult questions about whether its presence has sometimes done more harm than good.DocumentHow to Guide: [Sexual and Gender-Based Violence] SGV Programme Monitoring and Evaluation
Health and Community Development Section, 2000Programmes that tackle sexual and gender-based violence (SGV) in refugee settings need to take into account a number of issues and problems unique to this context. Some of the main problems arise from the need to bring together many diverse actors who will work on the same case, such as mental and physical health care workers, the police, government workers and legal advisers/officers.DocumentMillennium Development Goals, National Reports: A Look Through a Gender Lens
United Nations Development Programme, 2003A scan of 13 Millennium Development Goal (MDG) country reports shows that gender equality concerns are inadequately mainstreamed. They are confined to Goal 3 (gender equality), Goal 5 (maternal mortality) and Goal 6 (HIV/AIDS). In turn, the rights-based language often used under Goal 3 is lost under other goals where women feature in their traditional roles as mothers and as victims.DocumentSexual Orientation and Zimbabwe's New Constitution: A Case for Inclusion
Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe, 1999Why is there a need for development to talk about sexual orientation? All over the world lesbians and gay men suffer sexual identity-based discrimination in legal, social and cultural arenas. The role of law in upholding 'morality' has significant consequences in the case of sexuality when legislation can impinge on the right to be free from discrimination.DocumentUNSC Resolution 1325: South Asian Women's Perspectives
International Alert, 2003The perspectives of South Asian women on United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 1325 are the focus of this regional consultation launched by the Gender and Peacebuilding Programme of International Alert. This programme was established to recognise the diversity of women's experiences during war and conflict, and support their potential to contribute to peacebuilding and reconstruction.DocumentGender and Development: An Information Kit
2000This information kit is a tool for gender and development specialists/ consultants working in Egypt. It was produced by the Gender and Development (GAD) Sub-Group, the body responsible for coordinating and sharing information between the UN, bilateral donor and Egyptian NGOs on gender initiatives in Egypt. The kit is broken down into five booklets.DocumentThe Gender Dimensions of Poverty in Egypt
2001Does poverty in Egypt have a woman's face? Is female poverty linked to their conditions in the labour market or levels of education? Are women particularly at risk in poor households? This report addresses the gender dimensions of poverty using the recent Household Expenditure, Income and Consumption Survey of 1999/2000 for Egypt.DocumentThe Integration of Women's Rights in the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership/L'integration des Droits des Femmes dans le Partenariat Euro-Mediterraneen
Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Network, 2003The Euro-Mediterranean Partnership, launched in 1995, provides a framework for political, economic and social relations between the 12 partners of the southern Mediterranean and 15 European Union member states. This report explores the dynamics that hinder and promote women's rights within this partnership and in the Middle East and North Africa.DocumentWomen and Sexuality in Muslim Societies
Women for Women's Rights - New Ways, Turkey, 2000Controlling the sexuality of women continues to be one of the most powerful tools of patriarchy in most societies. The essays in this volume show that the sexual oppression of Muslim women is not the result of an Islamic vision of sexuality, but a combination of political, social and economic inequalities practiced through the ages.DocumentVictims, Perpetrators or Actors? Gender, Armed Conflict and Political Violence
Zed Books Limited, 2001Armed conflict and political violence are generally viewed as "male domains" in which acts are perpetrated by men as part of armed forces, guerrilla groups, paramilitary organisations or peacekeeping operations. The involvement of women, either willingly or inadvertently, has received far less attention.Pages
