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How can we shift the balance of gender stereotypes?

Shifting gender balance

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Page 1: Shifting gender balance

How can we shift the balance of gender stereotypes?

Page 2: Shifting gender balance

Gender is determined by nature and culture

Page 3: Shifting gender balance

Yet, culture starts very young…

Page 4: Shifting gender balance

Society tells us very early what is expected from us

Page 5: Shifting gender balance

Fairy tales teach us some lessons

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Clothes…

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Toys…

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Girls: Be quiet and behave!

Many girls learn to avoid taking risks and making mistakes.

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But boys will be boys…

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We still socialize our kids to different roles inside and outside home

Page 11: Shifting gender balance

We teach our daughters very early what value it has to be a girl…

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…and what will be expected from them when they grow up

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Be sexy and quiet…

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Calladita se te ve más bonita…

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TV reinforces these roles

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And videoclips make it pretty clear too…

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Even architects tell us what our roles are

And  that  we’d  be,y  be  pa/ent…  

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And it is still pretty clear who runs the world…

Page 19: Shifting gender balance

Which impact ?

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We are destroying women’s self esteem BIG GIRL, YOU ARE BEAUTIFUL

90%OF ALL WOMENWANT TO CHANGEAT LEAST ONE ASPECTOF THEIR PHYSICAL

APPERANCE

81% of ten year old girls are afraid of being fat.

And only 2% actually thinkthey are beautiful. 02

SHIFTBALANCE.ORG || ACCELERATING GENDER BALANCE Handcrafted by rodrigoseoane.com

Funny Weight Loss

Special Thanks to

funnyweightloss.comSource:  Women Don’t Ask / Oxfam / EU

Page 21: Shifting gender balance

All these messages hold women back

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In studies, men overestimate their abilities and performance, and women underestimate both.

Their  performances  do  not  differ  in  quality.  

Page 26: Shifting gender balance

Women seize less opportunities

•  Women apply for a promotion only when they meet 100% of the qualifications.

•  Men apply when they meet 50%.

Page 27: Shifting gender balance

Women  are  as  able  as  men.        But  o:en,  they  prefer  not  to  try…  

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Because the social cost can be high

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And the critics harsh

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So women sabotage their success…

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When was the last time you apologized?

Page 33: Shifting gender balance

Ways women sabotage their success

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Ways women sabotage their success

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Ways women sabotage their success

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The voice gap: who speaks?

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This is particularly true in public speaking

“I’m  not  an  expert.”  

“I  don’t  have  anything  to  say.”  

“My  colleague  is  be,er  qualified  than  me.”  

“I  don’t  have  enough  experience  or  legi/macy  in  that  field  yet.”  

“I  don’t  want  to  be  the  center  of  the  a,en/on.”  

“It’s  a  team  project,  not  only  mine.”  

“I  don’t  want  to  appear  egocentric.”  

“I  am  afraid  not  do  it  well.”  

“I  don’t  want  to  expose  myself  to  cri/cism.”    

Page 38: Shifting gender balance

June Cohen @TED: Where are the women?

Page 39: Shifting gender balance

This has a very clear financial impact for women

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Women speak less and when they do, they are more likely to be “manterrupted”

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In conferences, we mostly hear men’s voices, visions and opinions

Page 44: Shifting gender balance

Who wrote the Bible?

Page 45: Shifting gender balance

Who runs the TV and media channels?

Page 46: Shifting gender balance

Who is behind the camera?

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Who is behind the camera?

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The one who tells the story is the one who masters the narrative…

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Imagine for a moment that…

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You have never seen anybody like you running your own company, let alone your own country

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In the WHOLE world, only 9 countries are run by people like you

Sudanc

Chad

Nigeria

DemocraticRepublic of the Congo

Namibia

Botswana

Zimbabwe

SouthAfrica

Zambia

Kenya

Somalia

NigerMaliMauritania

Algeria LibyaEgypt

Morocco

BeninCameroon

Côte d’IvoireSao Tome and Principe

Equatorial GuineaGabon

Congo

Angola

BurkinaFaso

CentralAfrican Rep.

SaudiArabia

Yemen

IraqIran

(Islamic Rep. of)

Syrian Arab Rep.Afghanistan

Pakistan

India

France

Germany

Poland

FinlandIceland

Spain

Russian Federation

Australia

China

Mongolia

Kazakhstan

United States of America

Canada

Colombia

Bolivia(Plurinational

State of)

Mexico

Argentina

Peru

Brazil

Venezuela(Bolivarian

Republic of)

Greenland(Denmark)

Turkmenistan

Uzbekistan

Nepal

Bangladesh

Sri Lanka

Maldives

Singapore

Indonesia

Lao People’s Dem. RepublicViet NamThailandCambodiaPhilippines

JapanDem. People’s Rep. of KoreaRepublic of Korea

BruneiDarussalam

Bhutan

LatviaLithuaniaLiechtensteinAustriaSlovakiaSloveniaUkraineHungaryCroatiaBosnia and HerzegovinaRep. of Moldova

NorwaySwedenEstoniaBelarus

Romania

United KingdomNetherlandsIrelandBelgiumLuxembourg

SwitzerlandItalyMonacoSan Marino

PortugalMaltaTunisia

SenegalGambiaGuinea-BissauGuineaSierra LeoneLiberiaGhanaTogo

Cabo Verde

Western Sahara

Andorra

Falkland Islandsb

(Malvinas)

KuwaitBahrainQatarUnited ArabEmiratesOmanJordanEritreaDjibouti

UgandaSeychellesRwandaBurundi

ComorosMauritiusMalawiMozambiqueMadagascarSwaziland

Lesotho

BahamasCubaJamaicaHaitiDominican Republic

Saint Kitts and NevisAntigua and BarbudaDominicaSaint Lucia

GuyanaSuriname

Grenada

BelizeGuatemalaHondurasEl SalvadorNicaraguaCosta RicaPanama

Ecuador

Paraguay

Chile

Uruguay

AlbaniaGreece

T.F.Y.R. of Macedonia

Serbia GeorgiaArmeniaAzerbaijan

KyrgyzstanTajikistanJammu and Kashmir*

Bulgaria

a a

LebanonIsrael

Cyprus

Malaysia

Timor-Leste

PalauMarshall Islands

Micronesia(Fed. States of)

Tuvalu

Samoa

Vanuatu

Fiji

Tonga

New Zealand

Papua New Guinea

Pacific Ocean

Atlantic Ocean

Indian Ocean

Kiribati

Montenegro

Nauru

Solomon Islands

Myanmar

Denmark

EthiopiaSouthSudanc

United Rep.of Tanzania

Barbados

Turkey

Czech Rep.

Trinidad and Tobago

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

Women in Politics: 2014Situation on 1 January 2014

Women in parliamentThe countries are ranked and colour-coded according to the percentage of women in unicameral parliaments or the lower house of parliament,

reflecting elections/appointments up to 1 January 2014.

‡ The total includes deputy prime ministers and ministers. Prime ministers/heads of government were also included when they held ministerial portfolios. Vice-presidents and heads of governmental or public agencies have not been included.

Source: IPU. Data obtained from national governments, permanent missions to the United Nations and * publicly available information. Pr

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4.World and regional averages of women in parliament

Single house or lower house

Upper house or Senate

Both houses combined

World average 22.2% 19.5% 21.8%

Regional averagesRegions are presented in descending order of the percentage of women in unicameral parliaments or the lower house of parliament. The regional groupings used are those of IPU.

Nordic countries 42.1% — —

Americas 25.2% 25.3% 25.2%

Europe (Nordic countries included) 25.1% 22.8% 24.6%

Europe (Nordic countries not included) 23.5% 22.8% 23.3%

Sub-Saharan Africa 22.9% 18.9% 22.5%

Asia 18.9% 13.9% 18.4%

Arab States 17.8% 7.7% 16.0%

Pacific 13.4% 38.6% 16.2%

About this mapThe colour coding of the countries reflects the percentage of women in unicameral parliaments or in the lower house of parliament, and corresponds to the data found in the world ranking of women in parliament on the right-hand side of the map. A world ranking of women in ministerial positions is on the left-hand side of the map.All data reflects the situation on 1 January 2014. As the source of the data presented here, IPU is responsible for the criteria applied in displaying the information.The designations employed and the presentation of material on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of UN Women or of the Inter-Parliamentary Union concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city, area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.* Dotted line represents approximately the Line of Control in Jammu and Kashmir agreed upon by India and Pakistan. The final status of Jammu and Kashmir has not yet been agreed

upon by the parties.a State of Palestine (women in ministerial positions: 2/24 = 8.3%; women in parliament: 16/108 = 14.8%)b A dispute exists between the governments of Argentina and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland concerning sovereignty over the Falkland Islands (Malvinas).c The final boundary between the Republic of Sudan and the Republic of South Sudan has not yet been determined.

© Inter-Parliamentary Union, 2014

Women in ministerial positions

The countries are ranked according to the percentage of women in ministerial positions, reflecting appointments up to 1 January 2014.

Rank Country % Women Women Total ministers ‡50 to 59.9%

1 Nicaragua 57.1 8 142 Sweden 56.5 13 233 Finland 50.0 9 18

40 to 49.9%4 France 48.6 18 375 Cabo Verde 47.1 8 17“ Norway 47.1 8 176 Netherlands 46.7 7 157 Denmark 45.5 10 228 Peru 44.4 8 189 Switzerland 42.9 3 7

10 Belgium 41.7 5 1211 Bulgaria 41.2 7 1712 Liechtenstein 40.0 2 5

35 to 39.9%13 Rwanda 39.3 11 2814 Chile 39.1 9 2315 Iceland 37.5 3 816 South Africa 37.1 13 3517 United Republic of Tanzania* 36.7 11 3018 Burundi 36.4 8 2219 Haiti 35.0 7 20

30 to 34.9%20 Bolivia (Plurinational State of)* 33.3 7 21“ Germany 33.3 5 15“ Kenya 33.3 6 18

21 Uganda* 32.1 9 2822 Canada 32.0 8 25“ Malawi* 32.0 8 25

23 United States of America 31.8 7 2224 Panama 31.6 6 1925 Colombia 31.3 5 16“ Madagascar* 31.3 10 32

26 Austria 30.8 4 13“ Grenada* 30.8 4 14“ Latvia* 30.8 4 13“ Spain 30.8 4 13

27 Albania 30.0 6 20“ Italy 30.0 6 20

25 to 29.9%28 New Zealand 29.6 8 2729 Mozambique 28.6 8 2830 Gambia* 27.8 5 18“ Guyana 27.8 5 18“ Republic of Moldova* 27.8 5 18

31 Guatemala 26.7 4 15“ Luxembourg 26.7 4 15

32 Swaziland* 26.3 5 1933 Brazil 25.6 10 3934 Costa Rica 25.0 6 24“ Eritrea* 25.0 4 16“ Micronesia (Fed. States of)* 25.0 2 8“ Nigeria* 25.0 7 28“ Paraguay 25.0 3 12

20 to 24.9%35 Kiribati 23.1 3 13“ Seychelles 23.1 3 13

36 South Sudan* 22.7 5 2237 Cuba 22.6 7 3138 Ghana 22.5 9 4039 Andorra 22.2 2 9“ Benin* 22.2 6 27“ Ecuador 22.2 8 36“ Romania 22.2 6 27

40 Lesotho 21.7 5 23“ Namibia 21.7 5 23

41 Portugal 21.4 3 14“ Togo 21.4 6 28

42 Georgia 21.1 4 19“ Liberia* 21.1 4 19

43 Comoros 20.0 2 10“ Croatia 20.0 4 20“ Jamaica 20.0 4 20“ Kazakhstan 20.0 4 20“ Monaco 20.0 1 5

15 to 19.9%44 Angola* 19.4 7 3645 Bahamas 19.0 4 2146 Gabon* 18.8 3 1647 Israel 18.2 4 22“ Slovenia 18.2 2 11

48 Argentina 17.6 3 17“ Honduras 17.6 3 17“ Maldives 17.6 3 17“ Mexico 17.6 3 17

49 Australia 17.2 5 2950 Estonia 16.7 2 12“ Mongolia 16.7 3 18“ Montenegro 16.7 3 18“ Nauru* 16.7 1 6“ Poland 16.7 3 18

51 Senegal 16.1 5 31“ Sudan* 16.1 5 31“ Venezuela (Bolivarian Rep. of)* 16.1 5 31

52 Dominican Republic* 16.0 4 25“ Philippines 16.0 4 25

53 Morocco 15.8 6 3854 Côte d'Ivoire 15.6 5 32“ United Kingdom 15.6 5 32

55 Dominica 15.4 2 13“ Saint Lucia* 15.4 2 13“ Sao Tome and Principe* 15.4 2 13“ United Arab Emirates* 15.4 4 26“ Chad 15.2 5 33

56 Zambia* 15.0 3 2010 to 14.9%

57 Cameroon* 14.9 7 4758 Bahrain* 14.8 4 2759 Guinea 14.7 5 3460 Ireland 14.3 2 14“ Kyrgyzstan 14.3 3 21“ Malta 14.3 2 14“ Ukraine* 14.3 3 21“ Uruguay 14.3 2 14

61 Burkina Faso 13.8 4 2962 Belize* 13.3 2 1563 Ethiopia 13.0 3 23“ Mauritania 13.0 3 23

64 Niger 12.9 4 3165 Botswana 12.5 2 16“ Palau 12.5 1 8“ Saint Kitts and Nevis 12.5 1 8“ Tuvalu* 12.5 1 8

66 Algeria 12.1 4 33“ Mali 12.1 4 33

67 Barbados 11.8 2 17“ Indonesia 11.8 4 34“ Republic of Korea 11.8 2 17“ Timor-Leste* 11.8 2 17

68 Lao People's Dem. Republic 11.5 3 2669 Afghanistan* 11.1 3 27“ Antigua and Barbuda 11.1 1 9“ Armenia 11.1 2 18“ Hungary 11.1 1 9“ Japan 11.1 2 18“ Jordan 11.1 3 27“ Tajikistan* 11.1 2 18“ Zimbabwe 11.1 3 27

70 Congo* 10.5 4 38“ Uzbekistan* 10.5 2 19

71 Dem. Republic of the Congo* 10.3 3 29“ Egypt 10.3 3 29“ Sierra Leone 10.3 3 29

72 Bhutan 10.0 1 10“ Iran (Islamic Republic of) 10.0 3 30“ Marshall Islands* 10.0 1 10“ Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 10.0 1 10

5 to 9.9%73 India 9.3 4 4374 Cyprus 9.1 1 11“ Fiji* 9.1 1 11“ Serbia 9.1 2 22“ Tonga* 9.1 1 11“ Viet Nam* 9.1 2 22

75 Syrian Arab Republic 8.8 3 34“ Turkmenistan 8.8 3 34“ Yemen 8.8 3 34

76 Equatorial Guinea 8.7 4 46“ The F.Y.R. of Macedonia 8.7 2 23

77 China* 8.3 2 24“ Mauritius 8.3 2 24“ Thailand 8.3 2 24

78 Somalia* 8.0 2 2579 Samoa* 7.7 1 1380 Czech Republic 7.1 1 14“ El Salvador 7.1 1 14“ Lithuania 7.1 1 14“ Slovakia 7.1 1 14

81 Bangladesh* 6.7 2 30“ Kuwait 6.7 1 15“ Oman 6.7 2 30“ Russian Federation 6.7 2 30

82 Trinidad and Tobago* 6.5 2 3183 Malaysia 6.3 2 3284 Singapore 5.9 1 1785 Suriname 5.6 1 1886 Djibouti 5.3 1 19“ Greece 5.3 1 19

87 Qatar* 5.0 1 202 to 4.9%

88 Cambodia 4.7 2 4389 Turkey 4.0 1 2590 Iraq* 3.7 1 27“ Tunisia 3.7 1 27

91 Libya* 3.6 1 2892 Belarus 3.4 1 2993 Papua New Guinea* 3.1 1 3294 Sri Lanka 2.9 2 6895 Azerbaijan* 2.8 1 3696 Myanmar 2.6 1 38

0%97 Bosnia and Herzegovina 0.0 0 10“ Brunei Darussalam* 0.0 0 14“ Lebanon 0.0 0 29“ Pakistan 0.0 0 17“ San Marino 0.0 0 9“ Saudi Arabia 0.0 0 32“ Solomon Islands* 0.0 0 23“ Vanuatu* 0.0 0 11

Information not availableCentral African Republic, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Guinea-Bissau and Nepal

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Rank Country Lower or single house % Women Women/Seats

Upper house or Senate % Women Women/Seats

50 to 65%1 Rwanda 63.8 51 / 80 38.5 10 / 262 Andorra 50.0 14 / 28 — — / —

40 to 49.9%3 Cuba 48.9 299 / 612 — — / —4 Sweden 45.0 157 / 349 — — / —5 South Africa (1) 44.8 179 / 400 34.0 18 / 536 Seychelles 43.8 14 / 32 — — / —7 Senegal 43.3 65 / 150 — — / —8 Finland 42.5 85 / 200 — — / —9 Ecuador 41.6 57 / 137 — — / —10 Belgium 41.3 62 / 150 39.4 28 / 7111 Nicaragua 40.2 37 / 92 — — / —

35 to 39.9%12 Iceland 39.7 25 / 63 — — / —“ Spain 39.7 139 / 350 33.5 89 / 266

13 Norway 39.6 67 / 169 — — / —14 Mozambique 39.2 98 / 250 — — / —15 Denmark 39.1 70 / 179 — — / —16 Netherlands 38.7 58 / 150 36.0 27 / 7517 Costa Rica 38.6 22 / 57 — — / —18 Timor-Leste 38.5 25 / 65 — — / —19 Mexico 37.4 187 / 500 34.4 44 / 12820 Angola 36.8 81 / 220 — — / —21 Argentina 36.6 94 / 257 38.9 28 / 7222 Germany 36.5 230 / 631 27.5 19 / 6923 United Republic of Tanzania 36.0 126 / 350 — — / —24 Uganda 35.0 135 / 386 — — / —

30 to 34.9%25 The F.Y.R. of Macedonia 34.1 42 / 123 — — / —26 New Zealand 33.9 41 / 121 — — / —27 Serbia 33.6 84 / 250 — — / —28 Austria 33.3 61 / 183 29.0 18 / 62“ Grenada 33.3 5 / 15 15.4 2 / 13“ Slovenia 33.3 30 / 90 7.5 3 / 40

29 Algeria 31.6 146 / 462 6.9 10 / 14430 Zimbabwe 31.5 85 / 270 47.5 38 / 8031 Italy 31.4 198 / 630 29.0 92 / 31732 Guyana 31.3 21 / 67 — — / —“ Portugal 31.3 72 / 230 — — / —

33 Cameroon 31.1 56 / 180 20.0 20 / 10034 Switzerland 31.0 62 / 200 19.6 9 / 4635 Burundi 30.5 32 / 105 46.3 19 / 41

25 to 29.9%36 Nepal 29.9 172 / 575 — — / —37 Trinidad and Tobago 28.6 12 / 42 19.4 6 / 3138 Luxembourg 28.3 17 / 60 — — / —39 Tunisia 28.1 61 / 217 — — / —40 Ethiopia 27.8 152 / 547 16.3 22 / 13541 Afghanistan 27.7 69 / 249 27.5 28 / 10242 Philippines 27.3 79 / 289 25.0 6 / 2443 Lesotho 26.7 32 / 120 27.3 9 / 3344 Belarus 26.6 29 / 109 35.1 20 / 5745 South Sudan 26.5 88 / 332 10.0 5 / 5046 Turkmenistan 26.4 33 / 125 — — / —47 El Salvador 26.2 22 / 84 — — / —“ France 26.2 151 / 577 22.5 78 / 347

48 Australia 26.0 39 / 150 41.3 31 / 7549 Honduras 25.8 33 / 128 — — / —50 Namibia 25.6 20 / 78 26.9 7 / 2651 Bolivia (Plurinational State of) 25.4 33 / 130 47.2 17 / 3652 Singapore 25.3 25 / 99 — — / —53 Iraq 25.2 82 / 325 — — / —“ Kazakhstan 25.2 29 / 115 6.4 3 / 47“ Mauritania 25.2 37 / 147 14.3 8 / 56

54 Canada 25.1 77 / 307 39.6 38 / 9655 Lao People’s Dem. Republic 25.0 33 / 132 — — / —“ Latvia 25.0 25 / 100 — — / —

20 to 24.9%56 Bulgaria 24.6 59 / 240 — — / —57 Poland 24.3 112 / 460 13.0 13 / 100“ Sudan 24.3 86 / 354 17.2 5 / 29“ Viet Nam 24.3 121 / 498 — — / —

58 Lithuania 24.1 34 / 141 — — / —59 Equatorial Guinea 24.0 24 / 100 10.7 8 / 7560 Croatia 23.8 36 / 151 — — / —61 China 23.4 699 / 2987 — — / —62 Kyrgyzstan 23.3 28 / 120 — — / —63 Madagascar 23.1 34 / 147 — — / —64 United Kingdom 22.6 147 / 650 23.4 182 / 77865 Israel 22.5 27 / 120 — — / —66 Malawi 22.3 43 / 193 — — / —“ Peru 22.3 29 / 130 — — / —

67 Eritrea 22.0 33 / 150 — — / —“ Uzbekistan 22.0 33 / 150 15.0 15 / 100

68 Guinea 21.9 25 / 114 — — / —69 Bosnia and Herzegovina 21.4 9 / 42 13.3 2 / 1570 Greece 21.0 63 / 300 — — / —71 Cabo Verde 20.8 15 / 72 — — / —“ Dominican Republic 20.8 38 / 183 9.4 3 / 32“ Monaco 20.8 5 / 24 — — / —

72 Pakistan 20.7 67 / 323 16.3 17 / 10473 Cambodia 20.3 25 / 123 14.8 9 / 6174 Albania 20.0 28 / 140 — — / —“ Bangladesh 20.0 70 / 350 — — / —“ Liechtenstein 20.0 5 / 25 — — / —

15 to 19.9%75 Saudi Arabia 19.9 30 / 151 — — / —76 Czech Republic 19.5 39 / 200 17.3 14 / 8177 Kenya 19.1 67 / 350 26.5 18 / 6878 Estonia 19.0 19 / 100 — — / —79 Burkina Faso 18.9 24 / 127 — — / —80 Mauritius 18.8 13 / 69 — — / —“ Republic of Moldova 18.8 19 / 101 — — / —

81 Slovakia 18.7 28 / 150 — — / —82 Indonesia 18.6 104 / 560 — — / —83 San Marino 18.3 11 / 60 — — / —“ United States of America (2) 18.3 79 / 432 20.0 20 / 100

84 Sao Tome and Principe 18.2 10 / 55 — — / —85 United Arab Emirates 17.5 7 / 40 — — / —86 Morocco 17.0 67 / 395 2.2 6 / 270“ Venezuela (Bolivarian Rep. of) 17.0 28 / 165 — — / —

87 Barbados 16.7 5 / 30 28.6 6 / 21“ Saint Lucia 16.7 3 / 18 18.2 2 / 11

88 Libya 16.5 33 / 200 — — / —“ Togo 16.5 15 / 91 — — / —

89 Tajikistan 15.9 10 / 63 11.8 4 / 3490 Chile 15.8 19 / 120 18.4 7 / 38“ Thailand 15.8 79 / 500 15.4 23 / 149

91 Ireland 15.7 26 / 166 31.7 19 / 60“ Republic of Korea 15.7 47 / 300 — — / —

92 Azerbaijan 15.6 19 / 122 — — / —“ Dem. People’s Rep. of Korea 15.6 107 / 687 — — / —

93 Gabon 15.0 18 / 120 16.7 17 / 102“ Paraguay 15.0 12 / 80 20.0 9 / 45

10 to 14.9%94 Chad 14.9 28 / 188 — — / —“ Mongolia 14.9 11 / 74 — — / —

95 Montenegro 14.8 12 / 81 — — / —96 Turkey 14.4 79 / 548 — — / —97 Malta 14.3 10 / 70 — — / —98 Somalia 13.8 38 / 275 — — / —99 Russian Federation 13.6 61 / 450 8.0 13 / 163100 Romania 13.5 55 / 407 7.4 13 / 176101 Guatemala 13.3 21 / 158 — — / —

“ Niger 13.3 15 / 113 — — / —102 Bahamas 13.2 5 / 38 25.0 4 / 16103 Uruguay 13.1 13 / 99 6.5 2 / 31104 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 13.0 3 / 23 — — / —105 Dominica 12.9 4 / 31 — — / —106 Djibouti 12.7 7 / 55 — — / —

“ Jamaica 12.7 8 / 63 28.6 6 / 21107 Cyprus 12.5 7 / 56 — — / —108 Colombia 12.1 20 / 165 16.0 16 / 100

“ Sierra Leone 12.1 15 / 124 — — / —109 Georgia 12.0 18 / 150

“ Jordan 12.0 18 / 150 12.0 9 / 75“ Syrian Arab Republic 12.0 30 / 250 — — / —

110 Suriname 11.8 6/51 — — / —111 India 11.4 62 / 545 11.4 28 / 245112 Guinea-Bissau 11.0 11 / 100 — — / —“ Liberia 11.0 8 / 73 13.3 4 / 30

113 Ghana 10.9 30 / 275 — — / —114 Zambia 10.8 17 / 158 — — / —115 Armenia 10.7 14 / 131 — — / —116 Dem. Rep. of the Congo 10.6 53 / 498 5.6 6 / 108117 Antigua and Barbuda 10.5 2 / 19 29.4 5 / 17118 Malaysia 10.4 23 / 222 27.1 16 / 59119 Bahrain 10.0 4 / 40 27.5 11 / 40

5 to 9.9%120 Ukraine 9.7 43 / 442 — — / —121 Botswana 9.5 6 / 63 — — / —

“ Mali 9.5 14 / 147 — — / —122 Côte d’Ivoire 9.4 24 / 254 — — / —

“ Gambia 9.4 5 / 53 — — / —“ Hungary 9.3 36 / 384 — — / —

123 Kiribati 8.7 4 / 46 — — / —124 Brazil 8.6 44 / 513 16.0 13 / 81125 Bhutan 8.5 4 / 47 8.0 2 / 25

“ Panama 8.5 6 / 71 — — / —126 Benin 8.4 7 / 83 — — / —127 Japan 8.1 39 / 480 16.1 39 / 242128 Congo 7.4 10 / 136 13.9 10 / 72129 Maldives 6.8 5 / 74 — — / —130 Nigéria 6.7 24 / 360 6.4 7 / 109

“ Saint Kitts and Nevis 6.7 1 / 15 — — / —“ Tuvalu 6.7 1 / 15 — — / —

131 Swaziland 6.2 4 / 65 33.3 10 / 30132 Sri Lanka 5.8 13 / 225 — — / —133 Myanmar 5.6 24 / 429 1.8 4 / 224134 Nauru 5.3 1 / 19

0.1 to 4.9%135 Kuwait 4.6 3 / 65 — — / —136 Haiti 4.2 4 / 95 0.0 0 / 20137 Samoa 4.1 2 / 49 — — / —138 Tonga 3.6 1 / 28 — — / —139 Belize 3.1 1 / 32 38.5 5 / 13

“ Iran (Islamic Republic of) 3.1 9 / 290 — — / —“ Lebanon 3.1 4 / 128 — — / —

140 Comoros 3.0 1 / 33 — — / —“ Marshall Islands 3.0 1 / 33 — — / —

141 Papua New Guinea 2.7 3 / 111 — — / —142 Solomon Islands 2.0 1 / 50 — — / —143 Oman 1.2 1 / 84 18.1 15 / 83144 Yemen 0.3 1 / 301 1.8 2 / 111

0%145 Micronesia (Federated States) 0.0 0 / 14 — — / —

” Palau 0.0 0 / 16 23.1 3 / 13“ Qatar 0.0 0 / 35 — — / —“ Vanuatu 0.0 0 / 52 — — / —

No parliament on 1 January 2014Brunei Darussalam, Central African Republic, Egypt, Fiji

(1) South Africa: The figures on the distribution of seats in the Upper House do not include the 36 special rotating delegates appointed on an ad hoc basis, and all percentages given are therefore calculated on the basis of the 54 permanent seats.

(2) United States of America: Total refers to all voting members of the House. Source: IPU. Data provided by national parliaments.

Women in the highest positions of State

Women heads of state1 (9/152 = 5.9%) and women heads of government (15/193 = 7.8%)

Argentina (HS/HG), Bangladesh (HG), Brazil (HS/HG), Chile (HS/HG)2, Costa Rica (HS/HG), Denmark (HG), Germany (HG), Jamaica (HG), Liberia (HS/HG), Lithuania (HS), Malawi (HS/HG), Norway (HG), Republic of Korea (HS), San Marino (HS), Senegal (HG), Slovenia (HG), Thailand (HG) and Trinidad and Tobago (HG)

Women speakers of parliament3 (40/271 = 14.8%)Antigua and Barbuda (2 chambers), Australia, Austria, Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Bolivia (2 chambers), Botswana, Dominica, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Estonia, Gabon, India, Italy, Honduras, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Latvia, Lithuania, Madagascar, Mozambique, Netherlands (2 chambers), Poland, Portugal, Russian Federation, Rwanda, San Marino, Singapore, Suriname, Swaziland, Turkmenistan, Uganda, United Kingdom, United Republic of Tanzania, Uzbekistan and Zimbabwe

Women deputy speakers of parliament (159/601 = 26.5%) 88 parliaments out of 188 have women deputy speakers.

Note: (HS/HG) = The head of state is also the head of government.1 Only elected heads of state have been taken into account.2 President-elect.3 Of the total 189 parliaments, 76 are bicameral. As at 1 January 2014, one bicameral parliament has no speakers and is not included in the percentage.

Portfolios held by women ministers(1096 portfolios in 189 countries)

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 1100

66

913

151717

21222223

2424

2829

31343435

455656

6064

6971

7882

105 Social AffairsFamily / Children / Youth / Elderly / DisabledEnvironment / Natural Resources / EnergyWomen’s Affairs / Gender EqualityEducationTrade / IndustryEmployment / Labour / Vocational TrainingCultureHealthForeign Affairs (including Development Assistance)Public Works / Territorial PlanningHome Affairs / Immigration (including Integration and Refugees)JusticeAgriculture / Food / Forestry / FishingResearch and Development / Science and TechnologyCommunications / Telecommunications / Postal AffairsFinance / BudgetHousing / Urban AffairsTourismEconomy / DevelopmentTransportSportsLocal GovernmentPublic Administration / Public ServiceDefence and Veteran AffairsHuman RightsPopulationInformation / MediaParliamentary Affairs

Contacts:

Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU)E-mail: [email protected]

United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women)E-mail: [email protected]

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A world where the boss of the company is not like you

Source:  Inves-ng  in  Women  infographic  

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A world where experts on TV are not your category

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A world where you don’t belong to the elite

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A world where when you appear on screen you are mostly dumb and naked

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A world where the only thing that matters is how young you look

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A world where you are not portrayed in the movies

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Or only in a certain way •  Bechdel Test Movie List

1.  It has to have at least two [named] women in it 2.  Who talk to each other 3.  About something besides a man

•  2014 Oscar nominees –  “Gravity” — FAIL –  “Captain Phillips” — FAIL –  “American Hustle” — PASS –  “The Wolf of Wall Street” — FAIL –  “12 Years a Slave” — FAIL –  “Philomena” — PASS –  “Dallas Buyers Club” — PASS –  “Her” — FAIL –  “Nebraska” — PASS

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A world where girls are not seen

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A world where museums seem to have forgotten your art

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GIVE ME 5 NAMES OF WOMEN PAINTERS

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A world where people can hardly name 5 painters from your own gender

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A world where videoclips portray you as a naked slut dancing around a dressed up guy in control

Source:  Guerrilla  Girls    

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A world where nobody cares about your athletes

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A world where you still earn less for the same work

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Even in Hollywood…

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A world where you still have more work at home

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A world where street harassment is socially accepted

Interna/onally,  studies  show  that  between  70-­‐99%  of  women  experience  street  harassment  at  some  point  during  their  lives.  

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A world where you have one chance in 4 to be sexually assaulted…

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…and that the way you dress might be a justification

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A world where one out of three of you will be beaten or abused by your partner

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One in three…

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A world where the figures don’t play on your side

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And where denial is key

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And a world where people tell you that things are not that bad after all…

“A  lot  has  changed  recently.”  

“This  is  not  Afghanistan.”  

“It  takes  /me.”  

“It’s  be,er  not  to  go  too  fast.”  

“We  should  not  force  things.”  

“Step  by  step.”  

“With  quotas,  we  will  hire  incompetent  women  just  because  they  are  women.”  

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And that you shall be patient…

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Because the worst that could happen to you would be to be called a feminist…

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Wouldn’t you feel a tiny bit excluded from such a world… •  … and perhaps even pissed off about it?

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BarcelonaWomen

IT’s TIME TO SHIFT THE BALANCE!

10 JUN 2015

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What about men?

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Men are also victims of gender stereotypes

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They are expected to be…

•  Strong •  To provide for their family/partner

financially •  To initiate seduction •  To not display any emotion or weakness

•  They are often excluded from caregiving

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But new voices are emerging…

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Asking for a new role

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What can we do?Shift the balance!

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Buy new toys

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More than just a princess

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Show new role models

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Encourage our girls to lead, to take risks and to make mistakes

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Inspire them! Show them new role models!

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Sheryl Sandberg

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Beyonce

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Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

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Engage your daughters in science

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Speak up! Use social media!

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Engage your political representative!

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Challenge the brands!

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Communicate differently!

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Involve men in caregiving

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Report!

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Be aware! Mind your words!

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Portray women differently

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Actively look for women speakers

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Buy products empowering women

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Change the architecture!

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Ask!

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Change the narrative about yourself

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SPEAK!!!!

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DARE!

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