Women’s Empowerment Source: www.undp.org UNDP promotes equality between women and men through ’gender mainstreaming. ’ The organization’s corporate strategy on gender is designed to integrate the promotion of women’s empowerment and equality fully in the organization ’s core business. This strategy calls for gender mainstreaming to become everyone’s job – not the responsibility of a small number of specialists. It rests on three pillars: Developing capacities – both in-country and in-house
Premium Gender equality Gender Discrimination
WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS: Women entrepreneurs may be defined as a woman or a group of women who initiate‚ organize and run a business enterprise. In terms of Schumpeterian concept of innovative entrepreneurs‚ women who innovate‚ initiate or adopt a business activity are called business entrepreneur. It is the group of women or single women running an enterprise or company in order to earn profit. Now days because of women empowerment women are stepping-stone into the industries and are taking the
Premium Entrepreneurship Entrepreneur Economic growth
Women in Policing Laura Jones 2/12/2013 Grantham University Abstract Women have worked within our law enforcement system for over one hundred and seventy years. This paper examines the history and current status of women in policing and the challenges they have faced. History of women in policing will be presented from the first instances of women being hired as law enforcement to their current status. Research information
Premium Police
Essay on Problems of Women in Modern India By Pranav Dua * * * digg * Essay on Problems of Women in Modern India – Women in independent India are comparatively in a more respectable position. Some of the problems which had been haunting the community of women for centuries are not found now. Problems such as child marriage‚ practice of ‘sati’‚ prohibition on widow remarriage‚ exploitation of widows‚ devadasi system‚ purdah system‚ etc. have almost disappeared. Development in
Premium Lok Sabha Marriage
Empowering Women as Key Change Agents Women bear almost all responsibility for meeting basic needs of the family‚ yet are systematically denied the resources‚ information and freedom of action they need to fulfill this responsibility. The vast majority of the world’s poor are women. Two-thirds of the world’s illiterates are female. Of the millions of school age children not in school‚ the majority are girls. And today‚ HIV/AIDS is rapidly becoming a woman’s disease. In several southern African
Premium Gender Poverty Discrimination
Women continue to aspire for leadership positions in all spheres of governance in both the public and private sector. However it has not been easy. The paper will examine the many challenges women still face in taking leadership positions with specific reference to African women. Included in the paper are the barriers related to culture and cultural expectations‚ the choice and/or balance between work and family‚ and women’s own fear of success. Women continue to aspire to leadership positions
Premium Leadership Gender Higher education
WOMEN AND LEADERSHIP Leadership: A simple definition of leadership is that leadership is the art of motivating a group of people to act towards achieving a common goal. Put even more simply‚ the leader is the inspiration and director of the action. He or she is the person in the group that possesses the combination of personality and skills that makes others want to follow his or her direction. In business‚ leadership is welded to performance. Effective leaders are those who increase their companies‘
Premium Management Leadership Woman
wave of feminism that was also taking place in that time. It was then that women openly realized that their political and economic situation was absolutely unsatisfactory‚ and they started to demand for same rights as men had‚ including the rights to vote and to get qualified jobs. But To what extent did the feminists of the 1920s achieve their goals? Women’s status in the
Premium Roaring Twenties Women's suffrage World War II
In Darlene Clark Hine’s essay‚ “Rape and the Inner Lives of Black Women in the Middle West‚” she focuses on the struggles black women experienced in hope to live a better life for themselves and their children. These women dealt with the miserable combination of rape‚ domestic violence‚ and economic oppression and this influenced them to migrate to the Midwest in order to escape these mistreatments. They hope to gain a more comfortable life filled with opportunities; however‚ the mistreatment they
Premium White people Domestic violence Black people
that failed women” and “Association of African women for research and development” provide examples of how women reacted to their government and society. “The revolution that failed women” clearly points out that the Islamic women revolted against the government because they were being forced to wear a veil. Saying “they only need to find a husband” (doc 99‚ 405) and there was no need for them to have an education. In “Association of African women for research and development”‚ the women in Africa
Premium Islam Gender Sociology