Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere
Gender inequality-the differential access to opportunity and security for women and girls-has become an important and visible issue for the economies of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Gender equality issues in MENA are usually approached...
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okr-10986-150362021-04-23T14:03:12Z Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere World Bank AGRICULTURE CLIMATE DEVELOPMENT REPORTS DISCRIMINATION ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY EDUCATION POLICIES ENROLLMENT EQUAL ACCESS ETHNICITY FAMILIES FAMILY PLANNING GENDER GENDER DISPARITY GIRLS GROSS ENROLLMENT GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO HEALTH CARE HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HOUSEHOLDS HOUSING INCOME INCOMES INFANT MORTALITY INFORMAL SECTOR LABOR FORCE LAWS LEADERSHIP LIFE EXPECTANCY LITERACY LITERACY TRAINING LIVING STANDARDS MEDIA MORTALITY MOTHERS NORMS PARTICIPATION RATES POWER PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR SAFETY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIALIZATION SOCIETIES SOCIETY TERTIARY EDUCATION TEXTILES UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN CENTERS WORKERS WORKING MOTHERS WORKPLACE YOUTH GENDER & DEVELOPMENT WOMEN & THE ENVIRONMENT LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET ECONOMIC FACTORS GENDER WOMENS EDUCATION SCHOOL ENROLLMENT POOR FAMILIES HEALTH ISSUES FERTILITY PREGNANCY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES GIRLS EDUCATION ECONOMIC IMPACT UNEMPLOYMENT AGRICULTURE WAGES BENEFITS GENDER INEQUALITY WORKING MOTHERS MATERNITY LEAVE INFRASTRUCTURE POLICY MAKING Gender inequality-the differential access to opportunity and security for women and girls-has become an important and visible issue for the economies of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Gender equality issues in MENA are usually approached from a social, anthropological, or political angle. But the costs of inequality are also borne at the economic level. This book seeks to advance the gender equality discussion in the region by framing the issues in terms of economic necessity. It analyzes the potential for women's greater economic contribution to the region's new development model, which is further discussed in three parallel books on trade, employment, and governance. It identifies key economic and sociopolitical impediments to women's increased labor force participation and empowerment, and it suggests a way forward in developing an agenda for change. MENA's achievements in many areas of women's well-being compare favorably with those of other regions. Indicators such as female education, fertility, and life expectancy show that MENA's progress in those areas in recent decades has been substantial. Where MENA falls considerably short is on indicators of women's economic participation and political empowerment (figure O.1). MENA's rate of female labor force participation is significantly lower than rates in the rest of the world, and it is lower than would be expected when considering the region's fertility rates, its educational levels, and the age structure of the female population. 2013-08-12T21:01:25Z 2013-08-12T21:01:25Z 2004 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3028623/gender-development-middle-east-north-africa-women-public-sphere 0-8213-5676-3 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15036 English en_US MENA Development Report; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication Middle East and North Africa North Africa Middle East |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
AGRICULTURE CLIMATE DEVELOPMENT REPORTS DISCRIMINATION ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY EDUCATION POLICIES ENROLLMENT EQUAL ACCESS ETHNICITY FAMILIES FAMILY PLANNING GENDER GENDER DISPARITY GIRLS GROSS ENROLLMENT GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO HEALTH CARE HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HOUSEHOLDS HOUSING INCOME INCOMES INFANT MORTALITY INFORMAL SECTOR LABOR FORCE LAWS LEADERSHIP LIFE EXPECTANCY LITERACY LITERACY TRAINING LIVING STANDARDS MEDIA MORTALITY MOTHERS NORMS PARTICIPATION RATES POWER PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR SAFETY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIALIZATION SOCIETIES SOCIETY TERTIARY EDUCATION TEXTILES UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN CENTERS WORKERS WORKING MOTHERS WORKPLACE YOUTH GENDER & DEVELOPMENT WOMEN & THE ENVIRONMENT LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET ECONOMIC FACTORS GENDER WOMENS EDUCATION SCHOOL ENROLLMENT POOR FAMILIES HEALTH ISSUES FERTILITY PREGNANCY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES GIRLS EDUCATION ECONOMIC IMPACT UNEMPLOYMENT AGRICULTURE WAGES BENEFITS GENDER INEQUALITY WORKING MOTHERS MATERNITY LEAVE INFRASTRUCTURE POLICY MAKING |
spellingShingle |
AGRICULTURE CLIMATE DEVELOPMENT REPORTS DISCRIMINATION ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY EDUCATION POLICIES ENROLLMENT EQUAL ACCESS ETHNICITY FAMILIES FAMILY PLANNING GENDER GENDER DISPARITY GIRLS GROSS ENROLLMENT GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO HEALTH CARE HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HOUSEHOLDS HOUSING INCOME INCOMES INFANT MORTALITY INFORMAL SECTOR LABOR FORCE LAWS LEADERSHIP LIFE EXPECTANCY LITERACY LITERACY TRAINING LIVING STANDARDS MEDIA MORTALITY MOTHERS NORMS PARTICIPATION RATES POWER PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR SAFETY SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIALIZATION SOCIETIES SOCIETY TERTIARY EDUCATION TEXTILES UNEMPLOYMENT URBAN CENTERS WORKERS WORKING MOTHERS WORKPLACE YOUTH GENDER & DEVELOPMENT WOMEN & THE ENVIRONMENT LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKET ECONOMIC FACTORS GENDER WOMENS EDUCATION SCHOOL ENROLLMENT POOR FAMILIES HEALTH ISSUES FERTILITY PREGNANCY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES GIRLS EDUCATION ECONOMIC IMPACT UNEMPLOYMENT AGRICULTURE WAGES BENEFITS GENDER INEQUALITY WORKING MOTHERS MATERNITY LEAVE INFRASTRUCTURE POLICY MAKING World Bank Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere |
geographic_facet |
Middle East and North Africa North Africa Middle East |
relation |
MENA Development Report; |
description |
Gender inequality-the differential
access to opportunity and security for women and girls-has
become an important and visible issue for the economies of
the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Gender equality
issues in MENA are usually approached from a social,
anthropological, or political angle. But the costs of
inequality are also borne at the economic level. This book
seeks to advance the gender equality discussion in the
region by framing the issues in terms of economic necessity.
It analyzes the potential for women's greater economic
contribution to the region's new development model,
which is further discussed in three parallel books on trade,
employment, and governance. It identifies key economic and
sociopolitical impediments to women's increased labor
force participation and empowerment, and it suggests a way
forward in developing an agenda for change. MENA's
achievements in many areas of women's well-being
compare favorably with those of other regions. Indicators
such as female education, fertility, and life expectancy
show that MENA's progress in those areas in recent
decades has been substantial. Where MENA falls considerably
short is on indicators of women's economic
participation and political empowerment (figure O.1).
MENA's rate of female labor force participation is
significantly lower than rates in the rest of the world, and
it is lower than would be expected when considering the
region's fertility rates, its educational levels, and
the age structure of the female population. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Publication |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere |
title_short |
Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere |
title_full |
Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere |
title_fullStr |
Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere |
title_full_unstemmed |
Gender and Development in the Middle East and North Africa : Women in the Public Sphere |
title_sort |
gender and development in the middle east and north africa : women in the public sphere |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3028623/gender-development-middle-east-north-africa-women-public-sphere http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15036 |
_version_ |
1764425744894656512 |