Gad Checklist For Justice Projects
Gad Checklist For Justice Projects
Gad Checklist For Justice Projects
This GAD checklist has been designed for projects related to access to justice and similar issues.
It takes its inspiration from three documents: the Philippine Plan for Gender-Responsive
Development (PPGD), the Harmonized GAD Guidelines of the Philippine government and
the Official Development Assistance (ODA) donors, and the Action Program for Judicial
Reform (APJR).
GENDER ISSUES
All projects, including justice-related projects, must be subjected to a gender analysis
at two points: during project identification, and after the project design has been completed.
In the pre-design phase, there is a need to identify the specific gender issues relevant to the
proposed project as part of the situation analysis. Later, there is a need to assess the likely
gender impacts of the project as designed.
The gender issues or the gender dimension of, say, an access to justice project, may
pertain to gender-based biases or inequalities in the treatment of cases, complainants, and
defendants; insensitivity to the gendered differences in the statuses and circumstances of
women and men seeking or dispensing justice; or absence of processes, procedures, structures,
or mechanisms that will address the issue of access of the poor and the marginalized (including
various groups of women) to justice. Other issues are:
court processes and procedures that are not sensitive to the conditions and circumstance
of women, as reflected specifically in the gender-insensitive Rules of Court, sexist
language used in court decisions, and the insulting manner of cross-examining
witnesses of rape and other sex-related crimes;
low or lack of awareness within the pillars of justice of gender issues or new laws on
gender equality and womens rights, such as the anti-sexual harassment law;
lack of recognition of the value of promoting gender equality in the system of
performance award for judicial and nonjudicial personnel;
possible biases against gender-based crimes (such as rape) and in the assignment of
judges and personnel of the pillars of justice;
gender-role stereotyping that structures access to training in new skills;
limited sex-disaggregated and gender-related information about gender-related crimes,
access of women and men to justice, and actions taken or results of complaints;
codes of ethics of justices, judges, lawyers, and court personnel, as well as personnel
of other pillar-of-justice agencies, that do not require them to be sensitive to womens
concerns and gender issues;
lack of access of the public, especially the marginalized sectors, to information on the
nature and workings of the justice system;
insufficient public or community information on gender-related issues and concerns
or dissemination of such information by the pillars of the criminal justice system; and
multilayering of gender issues with class (when dealing with women living in
poverty), ethnicity (indigenous women), or economic sector (farming or rural women,
and informal sector woman workers).
STRATEGIES AND DESIRED OUTCOMES
In recognition of the gender issues that face the Supreme Court and the judiciary and
other agencies in the Philippine justice system, justice-related projects may incorporate the
following in their design:
Transformation of the paradigm and enhancement of the commitment of the judicial
system to gender equality through training and capability building
Review or conduct of a gender audit or assessment of policies, programs, and practices
to make these more gender-responsive
Establishment of a gender-responsive database on the judicial system
Promotion of the use of gender-fair language, core gender messages, and rituals for
higher gender awareness
Enhancement of partnership and networking with other GAD advocates
Decentralization and institutionalization of the information function of the judiciary,
and strengthening of the relationship between the judiciary and the media
Implementation by the pillars of the justice system of an effective and efficient system
of public information, education and communication (IEC)
Conduct of studies of access to justice by the poor and marginalized sectors, and how
to address affordability and other constraints
Organization of regular family courts throughout the country
Projects of the judiciary and other pillars of the justice system may be designed to
contribute to the achievement of gender equality results and outcomes, including the
following:
It must be noted that in identifying gender issues and strategies, project designers and
evaluators have to be sensitive to variations among women. Some women may be experiencing
double or triple exclusion because of their resource position, ethnicity, or disability. Gender-
related norms and attitudes also differ among ethnolinguistic groups and indigenous peoples
in the country. Given the differences among women, as between women and men, projects
and programs must be designed, implemented, and monitored with these in mind.
To help match gender issues and strategies, the following questions may be asked: Will
the intervention reduce gender gaps and inequalities? Will it reduce or eliminate biases against
women, children, the poor, and other marginalized sectors? Will it make the justice system more
accessible, available, or affordable to the poor and marginalized sectors, particularly women?
Box 18. GAD checklist for designing and evaluating justice-related projects
Response
(col. 2) Score for the
Result or
Dimension and question item/
No Partly Yes comment
(col. 1 ) element
(2a) yes (2c) (col. 4)
(col. 3)
(2b)
Project identification