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South Africa: Democracy Unfinished
April 16, 2008 – (IPS) A new report by the
Geneva-based Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) has shown that women
are changing the priorities and sometimes the tone of legislatures
around the world. But, it also highlights the slow pace at which
the number of parliamentary seats held by women is increasing.
In 1975, when the first United Nations World Conference
on Women took place in Mexico City, some 11 percent of places in
single chamber legislatures and lower houses of parliament were
occupied by women. By 2008 there had been scant progress on this
front: now, just under 18 percent of legislators worldwide are women,
far lower than the 30 percent that is widely deemed necessary for
women to begin influencing the direction of parliamentary affairs.
Equitable representation of women in legislatures
is clearly "an ideal, not a reality" notes the report,
titled 'Equality in Politics: A Survey of Women and Men in Parliaments'.
The study examines gender equality in legislatures
from a variety of perspectives, based on responses from approximately
300 parliamentarians (40 percent of whom were men) working in 110
countries and follows on a similar report published in 2000, 'Politics:
Women's Insight'.
'Equality in Politics' was released at the 118th
assembly of the IPU, underway Apr. 13-18 in the South African port
city of Cape Town. The union is an umbrella organisation for parliaments
around the globe.
The limited representation of women in legislatures
must be seen alongside more promising national and regional trends,
the report concedes.
There have been advances in Africa and Asia for
instance, with about 17 percent of parliamentary posts in the two
regions now held by women. Rwanda leads the field globally, with
women accounting for some 49 percent of those in its lower house
of parliament.
As regards countries that managed to have women
occupy more than 30 percent of parliamentary posts, half are developing
nations.
"Developing and emerging countries have made
great progress, while the situation in the so-called old democracies
has not moved forward much," said IPU Secretary General Anders
Johnsson.
But overall, observes the report, "...only
a small proportion of those (women) eligible consider putting themselves
forward for election to parliaments." In general, those surveyed
viewed lack of support from voters as being the main factor deterring
men from entering politics. For women, it was domestic responsibilities:
a third of the female parliamentarians surveyed did not have any
dependents, and were more than twice as likely as the men to be
single.
Noted Gwendoline Mahlangu-Nkabinde, deputy speaker
of South Africa's National Assembly, "In many countries, especially
in Africa, boys are raised differently from girls. Boys are raised
with the mindset that it is OK not to do the dishes, because their
sister will be there to do it."
Asked to discuss measures that could see more women
elected, the parliamentarians spoke in part of the need to alter
perceptions of women's place in society through education programmes
and to consider the introduction of childcare facilities to free
women for political pursuits. The report also mentions various possibilities
for helping women overcome the particular difficulties they face
in financing their election campaigns.
It further highlights the usefulness of gender
quotas to bring greater numbers of women into legislatures, and
how electoral systems based on proportional representation have
enabled more women to be elected than constituency-based ballots.
But, the study also speaks of concerns amongst parliamentary aspirants
about getting placed high enough on party lists to win office.
"Many parties operate without clear rules
for candidate selection..." it says. Yet, "How candidates
are selected by political parties is important. If party rules for
the selection of candidates are not clear, decisions can be made
by party elites, typically men."
Becoming part of the elite presents its own challenges:
"Political parties are typically closed entities and many maintain
'old boys' networks' that make it difficult for women to infiltrate
the party leadership."
These observations were echoed by Johnsson: "It
is therefore not only society and the parliamentary structure that
need to adapt and evolve to give way to women; political parties
need to come to the table too."
Legislative priorities
A number of those surveyed for the report said
that men and women seemed to share certain political priorities;
far more pointed to different priorities among male and female legislators,
however. Issues of concern to women included poverty alleviation,
pensions, reproductive rights, childcare and gender-related violence:
"Combating violence against women is an area in which women
legislators have made their presence felt in all regions of the
world."
According to Yassina Fall, senior economic adviser
at the United Nations Development Fund for Women, "Women understand
what other women need. They know about the challenges women and
girls face and understand the impact these challenges have on their
lives." "They realise that when you empower women, you
empower a society," she added.
Similar observations were made by Johnsson: "Quite
a few male respondents said that one needs women many women in order
to have a parliament that serves the people."
The report states, however, that while female legislators
appear to be taking the lead in foregrounding matters of importance
to women, these issues are not their sole concern.
In addition, women parliamentarians can experience
difficulty translating their priorities into political change, sometimes
because of unsympathetic ruling parties also because their limited
presence in assemblies prevents them from participating fully in
the parliamentary committees that scrutinise laws.
"Women are either left out of policy discussions
by virtue of their physical absence, or overloaded with committee
work, which means they ultimately cannot dedicate sufficient time
to committees and their inquiries."
Amongst a host of other observations, 'Equality
in Politics' notes that for substantive change to take place concerning
women's representation in legislatures, political will must be brought
to bear.
"Men and women must agree and acknowledge
that women's inclusion and equal participation in parliamentary
processes not only benefits societies...but is also necessary for
legitimate democracy."
Or, in the words of a female legislator from Ireland
quoted in the study: "Our democracy is unfinished when women
are absent from policy making."
From:http://www.ipsnews.org/africa/nota.asp?idnews=42010
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