Search
Searching in Egypt
Showing 381-390 of 528 results
Pages
- Document
Gender and sport: mainstreaming gender in sports projects
Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, 2005This paper looks at how to mainstream gender equality in sports projects and programmes.DocumentGender and sport: mainstreaming gender in sports projects
Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, 2005This booklet looks at how to mainstream gender equality in sports projects and programmes. Sport is a social and cultural process in which social constructions of masculinity and femininity play a key role.DocumentBoys and changing gender roles: emerging programme approaches hold promise in changing gender norms and behaviours among boys and young men
YouthNet, Family Health International, 2005This report describes various programmes which are operating in different countries to help boys and men reflect on issues related to masculinity and gender norms. For each initiative, project activities are outlined and an evaluation of the project’s impact is given.DocumentPromotion of Sexual Rights in Africa: Lessons from the Africa Regional Sexuality Resource Centre Initiative
BRIDGE, 2005This power-point presentation examines the challenges and rewards of using a rights-based approach to promote healthy, responsible and pleasurable sexuality in Africa. It draws on the ongoing work of the Africa Regional Sexuality Resource Centre (ARSRC), which is funded by the Ford Foundation as part of a worldwide initiative - ?Global Dialogue on Sexual Health and Well-being?.DocumentBreaking the silence and saving lives: young people’s sexual and reproductive health in the Arab States and Iran
Harvard School of Public Health, 2005This research reviews young people’s sexual and reproductive health (YPSRH) and gender issues affecting young people ages 10–24 in 19 Arab States and the Islamic Republic of Iran.DocumentFeeding hungry school children: added to the development agenda
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2005Of the 300 million chronically hungry children in the world, a third – mostly girls – do not attend school. On empty stomachs, children are easily distracted and cannot concentrate properly. Hunger impedes a child's ability to learn and achieve.DocumentMen's involvement in gender and development policy and practice: beyond rhetoric
Oxfam, 2001This document presents a compilation of working papers which were presented at the seminar "Beyond Rhetoric: Male Involvement in Gender and Development Policy and Practice" (2000).The seminar explored the ways in which development organisations have addressed gender and development in the past, the problems that they have faced, and possible ways of working which take account of the identifiedDocumentThe effect of child work on schooling: evidence from Egypt
Economic Research Forum, Egypt, 2005This paper includes causal evidence that lower crude rates of school attendance for Egyptian children are not due to limited access to schools but rather to a substantial burden of work.DocumentInstitutions, household decisions, and economic growth in Egypt
Population Council, Egypt, 2005Macroeconomic analyses of growth in Egypt indicate that labour contributes very little to growth, and that human capital, in particular female human capital, contributes little to increases in total factor productivity.DocumentWhy did economic liberalization lead to feminization of the labor force in Morocco and de-feminization in Egypt?
Center of Arab Women for Training and Research, Tunisia, 2004The purpose of this paper is to explain the different trajectories followed by Egypt and Morocco with regards to feminization of the labor force.Pages
