Gender Machineries Worldwide

The term gender machineries usually refers to formal government structures assigned to promote gender equality and/or improve the status and rights of women. Examining these structures in many countries around the world shows that in practice the machineries take a wide variety of forms, from formal...

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Main Authors: McBride, Dorothy, Mazur, Amy
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9118
id okr-10986-9118
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-91182021-04-23T14:02:44Z Gender Machineries Worldwide McBride, Dorothy Mazur, Amy World Development Report 2012 The term gender machineries usually refers to formal government structures assigned to promote gender equality and/or improve the status and rights of women. Examining these structures in many countries around the world shows that in practice the machineries take a wide variety of forms, from formal ministries to temporary councils and committees. They may be established by formal statute, executive decree, or bureaucratic rules, or there may be machineries in political parties that have a widespread influence. Some observers expect that effective agencies will be statutory, centralized, complex and well funded, a form that withstands changes in political leadership. However, there is no one single form that is consistently more effective generally than others. In addition, it is the variety of possible agency forms that allows machinery to adapt to blowing political winds and changing demands of gender policy and politics. At times a centrally located executive commission may be required; later, it may be a ministry or bureaucratic office; at still other times all three may coexist. In some countries, a range of single issue agencies--for labor, health, and education matters--can be more effective than a large Ministry expected to cover all issues. In others situations, machineries may be more active at regional and local government levels. 2012-06-26T15:38:52Z 2012-06-26T15:38:52Z 2012 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9118 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Africa Latin America & Caribbean South Asia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic World Development Report 2012
spellingShingle World Development Report 2012
McBride, Dorothy
Mazur, Amy
Gender Machineries Worldwide
geographic_facet Africa
Latin America & Caribbean
South Asia
description The term gender machineries usually refers to formal government structures assigned to promote gender equality and/or improve the status and rights of women. Examining these structures in many countries around the world shows that in practice the machineries take a wide variety of forms, from formal ministries to temporary councils and committees. They may be established by formal statute, executive decree, or bureaucratic rules, or there may be machineries in political parties that have a widespread influence. Some observers expect that effective agencies will be statutory, centralized, complex and well funded, a form that withstands changes in political leadership. However, there is no one single form that is consistently more effective generally than others. In addition, it is the variety of possible agency forms that allows machinery to adapt to blowing political winds and changing demands of gender policy and politics. At times a centrally located executive commission may be required; later, it may be a ministry or bureaucratic office; at still other times all three may coexist. In some countries, a range of single issue agencies--for labor, health, and education matters--can be more effective than a large Ministry expected to cover all issues. In others situations, machineries may be more active at regional and local government levels.
author McBride, Dorothy
Mazur, Amy
author_facet McBride, Dorothy
Mazur, Amy
author_sort McBride, Dorothy
title Gender Machineries Worldwide
title_short Gender Machineries Worldwide
title_full Gender Machineries Worldwide
title_fullStr Gender Machineries Worldwide
title_full_unstemmed Gender Machineries Worldwide
title_sort gender machineries worldwide
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9118
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