Making It Happen: Political Will For Gender Equality in Education
Making It Happen: Political Will For Gender Equality in Education
Making It Happen: Political Will For Gender Equality in Education
5. Making it
Happen
Political will for gender
equality in education
Commitment
Visible and sustained commitment by elected leaders and
administrators is crucial if positive changes in attitudes, policies, and
programmes affecting gender equality in education are to take place,
and if these changes are to be sustained. Commitment to achieving
gender equality and the empowerment of women through equal
access to all levels of education by 2015, as expressed in the third
Millennium Development Goal (MDG), may be legal or political.
The majority of countries are legally committed to achieving gender
equality and universal access to education. This commitment is
expressed through the ratification of international conventions,
including the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and the Convention on the
Rights of the Child (CRC). It is also reflected in domestic legislation
that guarantees free and compulsory education, and binds a
government to meeting national targets for achieving parity of
opportunity for girls and boys. Legislation against the abuse of girls
is a measure of legal commitment to achieving gender parity in
schools: psychological abuse, corporal punishment, sexual
harassment, and rape all severely limit the enrolment and retention of
female teachers and students in school.
Implementation and enforcement of legal commitments, however, is
often weak, and well-intentioned policy becomes diluted or even
evaporates as a result. Bangladesh, for instance, has a legal
commitment to the provision of free and compulsory education, and
has made significant strides towards gender parity. Yet almost half of
Bangladeshi households have to make donations to ensure the
enrolment of their children. In practice, legal commitment is never
enough to ensure girls access to education. Legal commitment must
be supported by political commitment: the commitment by
authorities to ensure that legislation and codes of conduct are
properly implemented and enforced.
Leadership
The leadership of individuals can create and sustain commitment to
the empowerment of girls and women, although leadership is
difficult to define. It includes, for example, intelligence and vision,
attractive personal qualities, rhetorical and organisational skills,
openness to innovation, and a willingness to take risks, make hard
choices and set priorities. Leadership is required from a range of
actors at central and local levels. At the top, presidents and prime
ministers, cabinet members, members of parliament, and ministry
officials must exercise leadership to establish and maintain gender
equality as a national priority, to ensure that programmes and
policies are followed through, and to counter opposition and inertia.
Leadership within national-level civil society is also essential if
demand for change is to be sustained. At the grassroots level, the
leadership of local administrators, head teachers, community
organisers, and traditional authorities can drive progress towards
gender equality.
Responsiveness
A third facet of political will is responsiveness. To achieve gender
equality, decision makers and education providers must be
responsive to the needs, rights, and ambitions of women and girls; to
the organisations and individuals acting as their advocates; and to
the evidence that demonstrates the value and benefits of gender
equality.
Ultimately, political responsiveness entails relationships of
accountability between citizens (especially women and girls), their
government, and education providers. In some cases, as highlighted
above, leaders already are responsive and act as champions for girls
education. In many cases, however, such positive developments will
not take place unless demand for progress is both loud enough and
articulate enough to require a response from decision makers and
service providers. Advocates of gender parity and equality must
therefore have a way to influence and call to account politicians and
other leaders, administrators, and educators.
The recent prominence of school fees as election issues in Malawi,
Uganda, Tanzania, and Kenya shows that education can win votes.
This is a promising development. However, the likelihood of
elections being won or lost on the basis of gender parity and equality
in education remains remote.
Civil-society organisations and social movements can use another,
less direct, mechanism for amplifying demands for change and
holding officials and service providers to account. Where civil society
is a strong and vociferous advocate for gender equality, it is more
likely that the empowerment of women will remain at the top of the
political agenda. Much of the progress made towards increased girls
enrolment in Bangladesh and parts of India and Sri Lanka in the
1990s can be attributed to the combination of a receptive national
government and effective campaigning and advocacy by civil-society
organisations. These constituencies for change are often spearheaded
by educated urban elites which have a strong commitment to
education for the masses for instrumental reasons (i.e. to transform
behaviour and attitudes of the poor in ways which are likely to have
broader benefits). These organisations, therefore, may or may not
give voice to poor women in rural areas.
Development partners
In many countries the strongest advocates of gender equality have
been donors, rather than domestic stakeholders. This external
pressure for commitments to gender equality has helped to put girls
education on the political agenda and has led to incremental changes
in existing policy and legislation. It has not, however, fostered
ownership of and commitment to this agenda by domestic politicians
and administrators.
Recommendations
Generating and sustaining political will is crucial to achieving gender
equality in education, and it requires sustained commitment,
leadership, and responsiveness on the part of decision makers.
Political will and State capacity go hand in hand, and those countries
in which political will has been joined with capacity to deliver have
made the greatest progress towards gender equality in education. But
without the capacity of a government to make and implement policy,
the most well-intended political commitments will remain unrealised.
Moreover, without on-going pressure from communities and civil
society organisations, gains in gender equality are unlikely to be
sustained.
1
Political will and capacity development go hand in hand. The role of
capacity development is discussed in paper 6 in this series: Developing
Capacity to Achieve Gender Equality in Education, Education and Gender
Equality Series, Programme Insights, (Oxfam GB, 2005).
2
L. Semu (2003) Malawi Country Study, background paper for the Global
Campaign for Education.
3
K. Hyde, A. Ekatan, P. Kiage, and C. Basara (2001), The Impact of
HIV/AIDS on Formal Schooling in Uganda, Brighton: Centre for International
Education, University of Sussex.
4
Paper 6, op. cit. This paper discusses the ways in which institutions,
practices, and priorities within organisations may be gendered in a way that
is disadvantageous to women and girls.
5
Adapted from K. Hyde and S. Miske (2000), Girls Education, background
report for Dakar World Conference on Education for All, Paris: UNESCO.
6
E. Kane (2004) Girls Education in Africa: What Do We Know About
Strategies that Work? Africa Region Human Development Working Paper
Series, Washington, DC: World Bank.
7
E. Kadzamira and P. Rose (2005) Non-State Provision of Basic Services:
Education in Malawi. Paper prepared for the Non-State Provision of Basic
Services Programme, DFID.
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