Women in development
A/RES/68/227
implementation, monitoring, evaluation and reporting of national development,
poverty eradication and environmental policies, strategies and programmes;
6.
Encourages Member States to continue to increase, as appropriate, the
participation of civil society, including women’s organizations, in government
decision-making in national development policy areas;
7.
Encourages Member States and the United Nations system to ensure
systematic attention to, recognition of and support for the crucial role of women in
the prevention and resolution of conflict, in mediation and peacebuilding efforts and
in the rebuilding of post-conflict societies, inter alia, through promoting women’s
capacity, leadership and engagement in political and economic decision-making;
8.
Expresses deep concern about the ongoing adverse impacts, particularly
on development, of the world financial and economic crisis, recognizing evidence of
an uneven and fragile recovery, and cognizant that the global economy,
notwithstanding significant efforts that helped contain tail risks, improve financial
market conditions and sustain recovery, still remains in a challenging phase, with
downside risks, inter alia, for women and girls, including high volatility in global
markets, high unemployment, particularly among youth, indebtedness in some
countries and widespread fiscal strains that pose challenges for global economic
recovery and reflect the need for additional progress towards sustaining and
rebalancing global demand, and stresses the need for continuing efforts to address
systemic fragilities and imbalances and to reform and strengthen the international
financial system while implementing the reforms agreed to date, and to address the
challenges posed by climate change for women and girls, and in respect of
maintaining adequate levels of funding for the achievement of gender equality and
the empowerment of women;
9.
Stresses the importance of the creation by Member States, international
organizations, including the United Nations, the private sector, non-governmental
organizations, trade unions and other stakeholders of a favourable and conducive
national and international environment in all areas of life for the effective
integration of women and girls in development, and of their undertaking and
disseminating a gender analysis of policies and programmes related to
macroeconomic stability, structural reform, taxation, investments, including foreign
direct investment, and all relevant sectors of the economy;
10. Urges the donor community, Member States, international organizations,
including the United Nations, the private sector, non-governmental organizations,
trade unions and other stakeholders to strengthen the focus and impact of
development assistance targeting gender equality and the empowerment of women
and girls through gender mainstreaming, the funding of targeted activities and
enhanced dialogue between donors and partners, and to also strengthen the
mechanisms needed to measure effectively the resources allocated to incorporating
gender perspectives in all areas of development assistance;
11. Urges Member States to incorporate a gender perspective, commensurate
with gender-equality goals, into the design, implementation, monitoring, evaluation
and reporting of national development strategies, to ensure alignment between
national action plans on gender equality and national development strategies and to
encourage the involvement of men and boys in the promotion of gender equality,
and in this regard calls upon the United Nations system to support national efforts to
develop methodologies and tools and to promote capacity-building and evaluation;
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