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LATIN AMERICA: Progress Towards Gender Parity
in Politics
Daniela Estrada
July 20, 2006-(IPS) Santiago: What factors continue
to prevent women from becoming members of parliament? How well have
quota laws worked in Latin America? How close is Chile to passing
a law of this kind to fight the continuing under-representation
of women in the legislature?
Quota laws, or affirmative action to remove the obstacles for women
to gain access to decision-making positions in the executive or
legislative branches, consist of setting a percentage or minimum
number of posts reserved for women, whether in government designated
positions, or as candidates on the election slates of political
parties.
"In general, quotas have worked well in Latin America. They
have significantly accelerated the presence of women in parliament,
particularly when the quota laws have been well thought out,"
Marcela Ríos told IPS. Ríos is one of the authors
of the study "Gender Quotas: Democracy and Representation,"
published in June by the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences
(FLACSO), with the support of the International Institute for Democracy
and Electoral Assistance.
Statistics confirm this. In countries in the region that have approved
quota laws for parliament, women hold on average 20.3 percent of
the total seats, whereas in countries lacking quota laws only 13.7
percent of the seats are held by women.
The quota mechanism is highly regarded by the Economic Commission
for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), which believes that
without gender quotas in Latin American countries, by 2052 women
would only occupy 40 percent of parliamentary seats.
Gender quota systems can be created through the constitution, by
law, or by the initiative of political parties themselves, and they
are based on the view that social conditions alone cannot overcome
the inequalities that exist in society, so it is incumbent on the
state to intervene.
At present, 50 of the world's countries have adopted such laws,
11 of them in Latin America and the Caribbean, with quotas that
vary from 20 to 40 percent.
Argentina was the first country in the region to approve such a
system for the legislative branch in 1991, when it set aside 30
percent of the seats in both the lower chamber and the Senate for
women.
Costa Rica, Mexico and Paraguay followed suit in 1996, Bolivia,
Brazil, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Panama, and Peru in 1997,
Venezuela in 1998 (although later it abandoned the quota system),
and finally Honduras in 2000.
Colombia is the only country to have a quota law for the executive
branch, which established a proportion of 30 percent of women in
high-ranking decision-making posts in all organs of the state.
FLACSO's study of 18 countries in the region, 11 of which have quota
laws, showed that in countries with such legislation, the presence
of women in the legislature grew by 9.5 percent between 1995 and
2004, while in countries lacking this mechanism, women's parliamentary
participation grew by only 2.9 percent.
However, the laws alone do not ensure an increase in the political
participation of women, the study says. The effectiveness of the
established quota depends on the nature of the electoral system
in each country, and on the dynamics of the parties, which serve
as the "gate-keepers" to participation in elections.
Quota laws are most effective within proportional representation
systems, which use closed candidate lists, and when the law stipulates
that women's names must be placed at or towards the top of the election
slates, so that they have a real chance of being elected.
These measures explain the very successful growth of women's presence
in the bicameral Argentine legislature between 1995 and 2004, which
increased by 28 percent, and in the Costa Rican Congress, where
seats occupied by women increased by 19.5 percent.
However, the impact of the quota laws was weaker in Ecuador, Mexico,
Panama, Bolivia and Peru, where the number of women in parliament
grew between seven and 15 percent. Meanwhile, the Dominican Republic
achieved a slight increase, 5.6 percent, while in Brazil and Honduras
no growth has been seen so far, and the proportion of women legislators
is below the world average of 16.6 percent.
In the opinion of the researchers, the situation in Brazil "is
a dramatic example of the need to draft this type of laws very carefully
indeed," and to include penalties for nonfulfilment. In Chile
the proportion of women in Congress, at 12.6 percent, is also below
the world average.
"At present, women cannot compete on equal terms to get elected
into parliament in Chile," because of the country's electoral
system, and the behaviour of the political parties, which have no
incentive to include a greater number of women, Ríos said.
Although the electoral system in this country is considered to be
proportional, the lists of candidates are open-ended, and since
only two representatives are elected in each district, it is difficult
for women to gain access to Congress.
President Michelle Bachelet's programme of government includes a
proposed quota law, but criticisms of the proposal have led the
executive branch to consider alternatives, such as promoting a protocol
by which political parties would commit themselves to include more
female candidates, National Women's Service Minister Laura Albornoz
told IPS.
Bachelet's cabinet, meanwhile, is made up of equal numbers of men
and women. "Half the Chilean population has no access to the
places where the country's decisions are taken, and the origin of
this problem is the traditional segregation of women, who are largely
confined to the domestic sphere. That's why we, as a government,
are looking into different mechanisms to reverse this situation,"
Albornoz explained.
Now, thanks to a draft constitutional reform presented by the government
to Congress a month ago, changes to the Chilean electoral system
are being debated. The motion includes a financial incentive to
encourage political parties to nominate more female candidates.
But whether this or other measures will be approved is still uncertain.
A survey carried out by the Humanas Corporation, asking 111 male
and female lawmakers whether they were in favour of a law to correct
women's under-representation and guarantee their presence in Congress,
found that 84.8 percent of representatives of the far-right Independent
Democratic Union (UDI) party were against the idea.
Even in the centre-left governing coalition, support was lacklustre.
Only 52.4 percent of Christian Democrat Party (PDC) members of Congress,
for example, were in favour. "We think the discussion is back
to front. Before creating a quota law, which would benefit an élite
in the country, we should pay attention to the real conditions which
keep women out of politics," Karla Rubilar, a deputy for the
centre-right National Renewal (RN) party, remarked to IPS.
Rubilar, whose party has publicly stated its opposition to the proposed
quota law, said that political parties do not discriminate against
women, but that it is women themselves who do not want to run for
office, being deterred by the "high level of personal sacrifice,"
late night meetings, and the prospect of working on weekends and
holidays.
A similar position was taken by former UDI presidential candidate
Joaquín Lavín, who said in an opinion column published
in the newspaper El Mercurio that participation in politics was
not a priority issue for Chilean women, as they had more serious
problems, such as finding jobs and fighting salary inequality and
domestic violence.
But none of these issues excludes the others, said Rios, who thought
there was a great deal of ignorance about quota laws and the results
they have had in countries where they have been implemented. Added
to this, there was "resistance from some sectors that don't
want to change the rules of the game," said the FLACSO researcher.
Former legislator Lily Pérez, the national secretary of RN,
said in an interview that quotas "create a situation that demeans
women" by casting doubt on their abilities. Pérez pointed
to Bachelet's election as an example, saying she had become president
thanks to her own "merits, hard work, recognition and qualifications."
Nevertheless, Ríos hoped that a law of this kind will be
passed during the current administration, "because it's a mechanism
that has proved itself in other countries as a swift and effective
remedy for the problem of women's under-representation in democratically
elected positions."
Albornoz confirmed that this is a high priority for the present
administration, which finishes its term in 2010. (END/2006)
From: http://www.ipsnews.net
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