Social Institutions: Transforming them to empower women

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Transforming social institutions paving the way towards gender equality

For the past few years, the OECD Development Centre has been researching how discriminatory social institutions (the long-lasting codes of conduct, norms, traditions, and informal and formal laws) can drive gender inequality across the world.

In March 2010, the OECD Development Centre published the Atlas of Gender and Development: How social norms affect gender equality in non-OECD countries, which provides regional and country-specific information as well as country rankings based on the Social Institutions and Gender Index (SIGI). While social institutions are often viewed as static, in fact they do change over time and can therefore be a powerful mechanism in changing socioeconomic and political outcomes.

We would like to document some positive examples of how social institutions have been negotiated and transformed at the local, national or regional level resulting in the empowerment of women or promotion of gender equality. For example, India has launched several innovative programmes to tackle the problem of early marriage, some of which have been documented in a report by the International Center for Research on Women.


Examples from the South

See also

References

  1. The Guardian, Poverty Matters Blog: Feminism in the global south hasn't come from the north
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