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UN committee calls for equal representation of women in decision-making

by casablancadaily.com

MENA Newswire News Desk: The UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) has called for the equal representation of women and men in all decision-making systems. This guidance, issued in the form of General Recommendation 40 (GR40), emphasizes the importance of a 50-50 parity to ensure equal access for women and girls across various sectors, including public, private, political, economic, and digital spheres.

UN committee calls for equal representation of women in decision-making

In its new guidance, the Committee stated that past targets of 30% female representation are insufficient and fail to align with the core goal of eliminating gender discrimination. According to CEDAW, “Targets of 30 percent representation of women in decision-making are incompatible with the Convention’s core aim of eliminating discrimination against women, as these convey a message that inequality between women and men is justifiable.”

The Committee stressed that achieving gender parity is essential for meaningful and effective decision-making. “Decision-making will have real and dynamic meaning and lasting effect only when it is shared at 50-50 parity by women and men,” CEDAW highlighted. The failure to achieve equal representation, it warned, will hinder progress in addressing key challenges at the national, regional, and global levels, including issues related to peace, political stability, economic development, climate change, and advancements in technology such as artificial intelligence.

According to a report by UN Women, women constituted just 16% of peace negotiators in 2022, and only 33% of peace agreements included provisions for women or girls. The Committee expressed concern over the structural exclusion of women from conflict prevention and peace negotiations, highlighting the urgent need for more inclusive approaches. Despite evidence suggesting that women’s political leadership fosters greater stability and peace, women held only 27% of parliamentary seats and 35% of local government seats globally as of September 2024.

CEDAW also pointed to the economic disparities women face, with women holding just 28.2% of management positions in the labor market. More women than men work in informal and lower-paying jobs, limiting their opportunities to ascend to decision-making roles. These inequalities are especially pronounced in sectors like financial governance, trade negotiations, and public procurement, where women remain underrepresented. “Women are excluded from shaping the economy at key decision-making levels,” the Committee said.

The rapid digital transformation, particularly the rise of artificial intelligence (AI), offers both opportunities and challenges for gender equality. However, the Committee noted that women have been largely underrepresented in the development of AI technologies, which have, in some cases, reinforced and exacerbated gender biases. Ensuring that women participate equally in shaping these innovations is critical for preventing discrimination in the digital future.

CEDAW outlined seven pillars of equal representation in decision-making, which form the basis of GR40. These pillars include gender parity as the starting point, youth leadership, intersectionality, representation across sectors, women’s equal power beyond numeric parity, structural transformations to challenge gender stereotypes, and the strong involvement of women’s civil society organizations.

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