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Gender

Gender is an important dimension of many of the pressing socioeconomic issues confronting Latin American and Caribbean countries today, including:





Bullet squareHigh rates of maternal mortality
Bullet squareTeenage pregnancy
Bullet squareChild labor
Bullet squareThe transmission of HIV/AIDS
Bullet squareLack of job and income opportunities for young adults

These issues are critical in the fight against poverty as they under-mine the capacity of the poor to make use of available economic opportunities. + Topic brief

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play Watch Presentation- The Power of Creating Economic Opportunities for Women   

 

 


ChildcareCHILDCARE POLICIES AND GENDER EQUALITY: Exchange of Approaches and Experiences between Europe and Central Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean Regions. Adequate childcare provisions are a key issue for development, not only for the well being of children, but also for their relation with women’s productive and reproductive time allocation possibilities. Childcare will thus impact: present and future human capital, social policy, technology development, labor markets’ interventions, and, of course, women. Read more


Reporte de ChileChile Country Gender Assessment. Chile ’s development in the recent past has defied conventional wisdom. Over the past decade, Chile has made considerable progress in its efforts to reduce poverty, sustain growth, and promote democratization. These advances have been coupled with notable achievements in gender equality. More specifically, Chilean men and women have experienced greater parity in terms of opportunities to services such as education and health, legal rights, as well as political voice. Yet by the same token, Chile has one of the highest levels of inequality in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), a factor that has proven, through international evidence, to impede economic growth and poverty reduction. This inequality has been evident in the workplace, with less than 39 percent female labor force participation, leaving Chile near the bottom of the regional heap. Worldwide evidence indicates that higher female labor force participation translates to greater economic growth. With low participation rates of a large portion of its human resources, this trend suggests that Chile has not fully maximized the potential for its economic success. Understanding and addressing the seeming contradictions in gender equality may serve as an important factor in maintaining continued economic and social development. More


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Events

Mar 05, 2008A Workshop on "Social Dimensions of Climate Change"

What's New

Apr 11, 2008World Bank Group To Increase Support To Women (Press Release)
Apr 02, 2008World Bank President Calls for Plan to Fight Hunger in Pre-Spring Meetings Address (Feature Story)
Feb 14, 2008PROFAM Argentina Strengthens Women and Families (Feature Story)
  
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Gender Newsletter (Spanish)
 

Gender Topics
Gender and Economics
Gender-Based Violence
Rural Development - PROGENIAL
Health
Promoting Gender Equity

Gender Analysis
Gender Assessments
Poverty Assessments

Gender at the World Bank

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