Tag: Women

Collecting women voices for Rio+20 Conference

http://www.unwomen.org/2012/04/collecting-women-voices-for-rio20-conference/

The UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) to be held in June will be an important opportunity to define international frameworks to advance sustainability. To amplify the voices of women in the discussions for Rio+20, UN Women is supporting the civil society network Women’s Major Group on gathering the views and gender perspectives on sustainability and what that means for women around the world through the Rio+20 gender survey.

Gender, Equitable Representation, Transparency

Negotiations have started off strong this week on the establishment of a global climate fund and associated governance arrangements.
There are high hopes for text to be agreed here in Cancun, but a fair and equitable fund must have principles of gender equality at its core.
Women are on the front-lines of the climate crisis. When natural disasters strike, they hit poor communities first and worst. Since women make up an estimated 70% of those living below the poverty line, they are most likely to bear the heaviest burdens.
They who regularly do the household work, cultivate the crops, collect the water and gather the fuel, are the most affected by climate change.
But it should also be understood that women are vital to building resilience in poor communities. As Bangladesh noted in Tianjin, smallholder women farmers know more about adaptation than those negotiating their very future.
Decades of donor aid flows and humanitarian programming provide substantial evidence of the need to address gender-differentiated realities and priorities in the management and disbursement of funds. The new global climate fund must learn from this experience. The new fund must be informed by principles of gender equality.
The composition of the fund’s executive board must be gender-balanced, and women should be at the heart of its funding priorities. While including women on the board will not guarantee that the fund responds to the needs of both poor women and men, achieving greater gender parity within the decision-making structure is a first step.
ECO also believes the fund’s governance principles should call on countries to prioritize the most vulnerable populations, including women, in their proposals and to demonstrate a genuinely inclusive and participatory process for planning as well as future implementation and monitoring. These elements are important not only for gender equality but also for overall transparency and accountability to those most vulnerable.
No existing global climate fund has yet ensured equitable gender representation in its governance structures. This trend must be reversed to ensure women benefit from, and are not harmed by, future climate finance. It’s time for negotiators to bring gender to the fund’s agenda.

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Global Climate Fund_Briefing Paper _Oxfam - Oct 2010

Climate change is already negatively affecting the lives and livelihoods of poor men and women. Yet it is estimated that less than a tenth of climate funds to date have been spent on helping people in vulnerable countries adapt to the impacts of climate change. The poor are losing out twice: they are hardest hit by climate change they didn’t cause, and they are being neglected by funds that should be helping them. Climate finance can and must be made to work from the bottom up, particularly for women smallholder farmers.  

Starting with the formal establishment of a new Global Climate Fund, decisions on climate finance governance need to set a new direction for a post-2012 era.  This paper presents a vision for a new Fund and broader finance system that is effective in meeting the scale of developing country financing needs, and is widely considered – by governments and civil societies – to be legitimate in its decision-making.  
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Women’s Statement at COP12 / COP-MOP2 - 17, Nov, 2006

Nairobi, 17 November 2006

Delivered by Ms Annabell Waititu, on behalf of genanet/LIFE e.V. and women gather at COP12

Mr. President, distinguished delegates:

Let me tell you about my village in Nyeri in the Central Province of Kenya. Here, women are responsible for agricultural production in terms of household use. While women’s farming secures the food for the families, men are more engaged in commercial farming. Nowadays, our farmers can no longer plan when to start their planting because the rains are increasingly delayed. They can only plant when the rain begins. When they plant, the rain may stop suddenly, causing loss of seeds or production failure. Unfortunately, the farmers don’t know that the changes in weather patterns are related to climate change. Relevant information is not available to them so that they can make an informed decision on what to plant when, and secure a good harvest.

Women and men fulfil different roles in their families and societies. Their situation differs with regard to economic sectors, income, and property ownership. Women constitute the majority of the world’s poor, and are often more dependent on natural resources. Moreover, women and men impact the climate differently. And they are differently affected by climate change. They can play specific roles in mitigation. And they have particular needs, and specific contributions to make to adaptation.

We are concerned that gender issues, women’s needs, interests and aspirations are not included in the discussions here. After all, Climate Change is a sustainable development challenge.

Take adaptation: Adaptation programmes need to acknowledge the different capacity of men and women to cope with climate change. It is particularly important to ensure women’s participation in developing adaptation programmes. Gender analysis should be integrated into National Adaptation Plans. Women should have an equal say in how resources for adaptation are spent at the national level.

Take capacity building: Capacity building programmes should educate girls and boys, women and men about climate change, enabling them to adapt. However, many programmes are not target-group specific, ignoring the fact that women and men use different channels to share information. In their design and rollout, these campaigns should draw on priorities put forward by women and local communities. Information needs to reach women, particularly rural women who are remote from the cities and information and technologies.

Finally, let’s talk about market-based mechanisms: They marginalize those who do not have the cash to buy their water, fuel wood and medicines. The monetary poor include women, Indigenous Peoples, and landless farmers. These people also lack formal land titles, marketing skills, investment capital and information they would need if the they wished to compete in environmental services markets. Therefore, all market-based approaches need a careful analysis of positive and negative effects on all potential market actors. This cannot necessarily be done at the national level but may require context-specific analysis at the local level.

Distinguished delegates, we need information, technology transfer, and resources – particularly for women, especially in Africa. Without that, we will not have effective climate protection, we will not have sustainable development, we will not have justice.

Therefore, we call for a creative and integrated approach to climate change policy. If you are lacking in ideas, women are prepared to contribute! 

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