缅北禁地

Women and Gender Equality

celebrates the 鈥渃an do鈥 attitude of women inventors, creators, and entrepreneurs around the world 鈥 and their ground-breaking work and ingenuity that transform our world. 

To help bridge the gender digital divide, the created the (27 April) to encourage and inspire girls to pursue a future in information and communication technologies. By acquiring the necessary digital skills, young women can also aim for careers in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and other STEM fields in order to achieve their dreams. From coding to a hackathon, the global celebration, will include a series of events available on the . !

Just a few months ago, a women鈥檚 business centre supporting female traders, was bustling with people. Today, it鈥檚 silent. plans to distribute tablets to conduct online teaching.

Around the world, patriarchal systems of power have long reinforced norms and ideas that drive gender inequality and its devastating manifestations, including gender-based violence. These issues impact millions of women and girls every year; in fact, one third of women globally have experienced intimate partner violence, non-partner sexual violence or both. Amid these challenges, and Palestine鈥檚 Ministry of Health launched a new programme to educate midwives, obstetricians, doctors, and others on how to care for patients who have experienced sexual violence. 

Malika Machalikashvili鈥檚 farm in Georgia was once pretty traditional Today she sells her produce using a smartphone. For the last three years, Malika has been attending trainings, which teach smallholder farmers about better agricultural practices. These platforms have also proved very useful for teaching rural men and women about gender equality, gender-based violence and women鈥檚 economic empowerment. These trainings help smallholder women farmers feel empowered to stand up for their rights, grow their businesses and implement successful economic initiatives.

鈥檚 online courses in least developed countries (LDCs) benefit from trade.

The IAEA its new professional development programme to boost women鈥檚 careers in the nuclear field: the

As the world steps forward to curb climate change and nature loss, finding solutions that work is vital. Our collective destination will not be reached without women鈥檚 equal participation and leadership. is thwarting stereotypes, expanding opportunities, and implementing solutions. In from , you can read about , a community ranger working to  and help stamp out crime in Indonesia; , who joined previously male-dominated professions becoming a ranger to protect black-necked cranes in China; , who is working to redefine how medicinal herbs are cultivated and preserved in Viet Nam; and , who is weaving a better future in India.

International Women鈥檚 Day recognizes the critical contributions of women human rights defenders and feminist movements, who use the transformative power of digital technology to connect, mobilize, and drive social change, while fighting against the persistent pushback of women鈥檚 rights. The digital world offers immense opportunities, but it isn鈥檛 immune to the persistent backlash against women鈥檚 rights and gender equality including gender-based violence and digital exclusion. 鈥淚nternational Women鈥檚 Day reminds us of the patriarchal power dynamics, old and new, that hold our world back from fulfilling the rights of all women and girls,鈥 缅北禁地 Volker T眉rk, "The digital space has yet to undergo a much-needed feminist revolution 鈥 and it must."

Illustration of several women using and working with different kinds of digital devices and systems, such as big touch screens, videogames, videocall software, drones and virtual-reality goggles

Today women make up under a third of the workforce in science, technology, engineering, and maths (STEM). When women are under-represented in developing new technologies, discrimination may be baked in from the start. This International Women鈥檚 Day (8 March) with the theme 鈥,鈥 recognizes the women and girls championing transformative technologies and digital education. The observance explores the impact of the digital gender gap on widening inequalities and the importance of protecting women鈥檚 rights in digital spaces. .

Emerging technologies and digital access can greatly improve the well-being, education, health, and livelihoods of women and girls. However, a significant digital gender gap remains, limiting the equitable benefits of digital transformation. The 鈥 an intergovernmental body dedicated to gender equality and women鈥檚 empowerment 鈥 will address this problem in its (6-17 March). The group will revisit the gendered impacts of innovation and identify recommendations for a more inclusive and equitable digital evolution.

 

is one of the lucky ones. She managed to escape from Afghanistan in August 2021, just as the Taliban overran the country鈥檚 capital. Today, while the 20-year-old engineering student pursues a degree in the US, her former classmates back home have been banned from the classroom.

In support of this week鈥檚  conference in Geneva and its call for learning support in emergencies, Somaya has been speaking to 缅北禁地News鈥檚 Daniel Johnson.

Photo: 漏 Courtesy of Somaya Faruqi

Young activists advocate for Ending FGM.

Some 4.2 million girls are at risk of the harmful practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) during 2023 alone.  Partnerships with men and boys can make the largest global impact in reaching the Sustainable Development Goals target of eliminating FGM by 2030. Be part of the  of this year鈥檚  International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation (6 February) and share with the world: #MenEndFGM!

A group of worried women gathered at a community centre on the outskirts of Afghanistan鈥檚 capital, Kabul. Many have recently completed a livelihoods training project run by local NGO in partnership with the . But the future of the project and the women hangs in the balance. Recent decrees issued by Afghanistan鈥檚 authorities have barred female employees with non-governmental organisations from going to work. If the decree is not amended, projects such as this one, which involves female NGO staff training other women, will be unable to continue.

In 2022, amidst conflict, crisis, and a growing global pushback on gender equality, pushed forward. Looking ahead to 2023, the 缅北禁地agency is calling on everyone around the world to work together to ensure that women鈥檚 rights are upheld, their leadership is guaranteed, their needs are met in times of crisis, and their lives are always free of violence.