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The Journey Towards Comprehensive Sexuality Education: Global Status Report Année de publication: 2021 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO | Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) | United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) | United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) | United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) | World Health Organization (WHO) Comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) is central to children and young people’s well-being, equipping them with the knowledge and skills they need to make healthy and responsible choices in their lives. This report draws on multiple data sources to provide analysis of countries’ progress towards delivering good quality school-based CSE to all learners. 85 per cent of 155 countries surveyed have policies or laws relating to sexuality education, with considerably more countries reporting policies to mandate delivery at secondary education level than at primary level. However, the existence of policy and legal frameworks do not always equate to comprehensive content or strong implementation. Most countries report that they have some curricula in place but more detailed analysis suggests that it often lacks the breadth of topics needed to make sexuality education effective and relevant. Moreover, while efforts to scale-up teacher training are evident in a range of settings, research with teachers shows that many feel they lack confidence to deliver sexuality education. Surveys show that students frequently feel that they received information too late and would have preferred sexuality education to have started earlier in their schooling. There is evidence of opposition to CSE across a range of settings, often reflecting misinformation about the content, purpose or impact of such education. However, in many countries involvement of communities, including parents, school officials, religious leaders, media and young people themselves, has created a favourable environment for CSE. Recommendations to countries in this report include:Clear mandates and budgets to ensure implementation of policies and programmes that support the availability of good quality comprehensive sexuality education for all learners.Invest in quality curriculum reform and teacher training.Strengthen monitoring of the implementation of CSE.  Handbook on Gender Mainstreaming for Gender Equality Results Année de publication: 2022 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) This handbook identifies the key concepts, principles, and approaches underlying gender mainstreaming. It outlines opportunities to apply gender analyses across different contexts and manage for gender equality results. It also illustrates how to identify opportunities for organizational change, enhance financing for gender equality, and strengthen monitoring and evaluation for the oversight of the results of gender mainstreaming.While the Handbook is focused specifically on the more traditional areas of development policy and practice, the discussions, findings, and recommendations are equally applicable in the context of humanitarian responses and programmes in conflict and peace-building contexts.  A World History of Women’s Rights in 3 Minutes Année de publication: 2020 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) How far have we advanced in the global fight for equal rights and how much remains to be done? From suffrage campaigns around the world to the rise of the #MeToo movement and digital activism, we've made little progress. However, the fight for gender equality is far from over. Meet remarkable women and discover the grassroots movements and historic milestones that have helped change the world for women and girls.  Una historia mundial de los derechos de las mujeres en 3 munutos Année de publication: 2020 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) ¿Cuánto hemos avanzado en la lucha mundial por lograr la igualdad de derechos y cuánto queda por hacer? Desde las campañas sufragistas en todo el mundo al surgimiento del movimiento #MeToo y el activismo digital, hemos progresado poco a poco. Sin embargo, la lucha por la igualdad de género está lejos de haber acabado. Conoce a mujeres notables y descubre los movimientos de base y los hitos históricos que han contribuido a cambiar el mundo para las mujeres y las niñas.  Generation Equality Accountability Report 2022 Année de publication: 2022 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) In the UN Decade for Action on Gender Equality, people around the world have pledged to move from rhetoric to action and to work together to drive lasting change, starting now. Through the 2021 Generation Equality Forum in Mexico and France, world leaders and partners committed to eliminating gender inequalities and to financing and implementing laws, policies, and programmes to meet priority actions and targets in a Global Acceleration Plan for Gender Equality. The aim is simple but profound: deliver irreversible, quantifiable results for women and girls in all their diversity.Together, commitment makers and signatories of a series of Action Coalitions, along with the Compact for Women, Peace and Security and Humanitarian Action have begun to build an ambitious global movement. It unites diverse partners committed to collective accountability for women and girls. This accountability is the driving force of this report, which takes stock of the bold commitments made at the Forum one year into implementation. Through a survey of commitment-makers, the report sheds light on the nature of the commitments and assesses measurable progress. It highlights trends and notes where more work is needed.Generation Equality was born from the idea that the world could make catalytic progress on gender equality if a wide range of stakeholders united around a transformative vision and worked together to achieve it. These preliminary findings demonstrate that, while more remains to be done, collective action is powerful in making commitments real in the lives of women and girls.  Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The Gender Snapshot 2022 Année de publication: 2022 Auteur: Ginette Azcona | Antra Bhatt | Julia Brauchle | Guillem Fortuny Fillo | Yongyi Min | Heather Page | Yuxi Zhang Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) | UN. Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN. DESA) The latest available Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 5 data show that the world is not on track to achieve gender equality by 2030. COVID-19 and the backlash against women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights are further diminishing the outlook for gender equality. Violence against women remains high; global health, climate, and humanitarian crises have further increased risks of violence, especially for the most vulnerable women and girls; and women feel more unsafe than they did before the pandemic. Women’s representation in positions of power and decision-making remains below parity. Only 47 per cent of data required to track progress on SDG 5 are currently available, rendering women and girls effectively invisible.Nearly halfway to the 2030 endpoint for the SDGs, the time to act and invest in women and girls is now.“Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The gender snapshot 2022” presents the latest evidence on gender equality across all 17 Goals, calling out the long road ahead to achieve gender equality. It emphasizes the interlinkages among the goals, the pivotal force gender equality plays in driving progress across the SDGs, and women and girls’ central role in leading the way forward.  Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The Gender Snapshot 2021 Année de publication: 2021 Auteur: Ginette Azcona | Antra Bhatt | Julia Brauchle | Guillem Fortuny Fillo | Yongyi Min | Heather Page | Yuxi Zhang Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) | UN. Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN. DESA) The pandemic has tested and even reversed progress in expanding women’s rights and opportunities. Women have not recovered lost jobs and income, hunger is on the rise, and school closures threaten girls’ educational gains. Women’s participation in government, research, and resource management remains far from equal. Vulnerable groups of women, including migrants, those with disabilities, and those affected by conflict, are frequently left behind. Disparities between rich and poor countries are preventing equal access to lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines and treatments, putting women in poorer countries at disproportionate risk.Moreover, despite women’s central roles in responding to COVID-19, including as front-line health workers, they do not have the leadership positions they deserve. Building forward differently and better will require placing women and girls at the centre of all aspects of response and recovery, including through gender-responsive laws, policies, and budgeting.“Progress on the Sustainable Development Goals: The gender snapshot 2021” presents the latest evidence on gender equality across all 17 Goals, highlighting the progress made since 2015 but also the continued alarm over the COVID-19 pandemic, its immediate effect on women’s well-being, and the threat it poses to future generations.  El progreso en el cumplimiento de los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible: Panorama de género 2021 Année de publication: 2021 Auteur: Ginette Azcona | Antra Bhatt | Julia Brauchle | Guillem Fortuny Fillo | Yongyi Min | Heather Page | Yuxi Zhang Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) | UN. Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN. DESA) La pandemia puso a prueba e incluso revirtió el progreso alcanzado en la expansión de los derechos y las oportunidades de las mujeres. Las mujeres no han recuperado el empleo y los ingresos perdidos, el hambre ha aumentado, y el cierre de las escuelas supone una amenaza para los logros de las niñas en la esfera educativa. La participación de las mujeres en el Gobierno, la investigación y la gestión de los recursos sigue lejos de ser igualitaria. Los grupos vulnerables de mujeres, incluidas las migrantes, aquellas con discapacidad, y las afectadas por los conflictos, con frecuencia quedan rezagadas. Las disparidades entre países ricos y pobres impiden el acceso a los tratamientos y vacunas tan vitales contra el COVID-19, lo que pone a los países más pobres frente a un riesgo desproporcionado. Por otra parte, pese al papel central de las mujeres en la respuesta al COVID-19, incluidas las trabajadoras sanitarias de la primera línea, estas no ocupan los puestos de liderazgo que merecen. En adelante, una reconstrucción mejor y diferente exigirá colocar a las mujeres y las niñas en el centro de todos los aspectos de la respuesta y la reconstrucción, entre otras cosas, a través de leyes, políticas y presupuestos con perspectiva de género.En El progreso en el cumplimiento de los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible:Panorama de género 2021 se presenta la evidencia más reciente sobre igualdad de género en la totalidad de los 17 objetivos. Se destaca el progreso alcanzado desde 2015, así como la alarma continua de la pandemia del COVID-19, sus efectos inmediatos en el bienestar de las mujeres y la amenaza que supone para las generaciones futuras.  Progrès vers la réalisation des Objectifs de développement durable : Gros plan sur l’égalité des sexes 2021 Année de publication: 2021 Auteur: Ginette Azcona | Antra Bhatt | Julia Brauchle | Guillem Fortuny Fillo | Yongyi Min | Heather Page | Yuxi Zhang Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) | UN. Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN. DESA) La pandémie a mis à l’épreuve et même inversé les progrès dans l’élargissement des droits et des opportunités des femmes. Les femmes n’ont pas récupéré les emplois et les revenus perdus, la faim augmente et les fermetures d’écoles menacent les progrès scolaires des filles. La participation des femmes au gouvernement, à la recherche et à la gestion des ressources est loin d’être égale. Les groupes de femmes vulnérables, y compris les migrantes, les personnes handicapées et celles touchées par les conflits, sont souvent laissés pour compte. Les disparités entre les pays riches et les pays pauvres empêchent l’égalité d’accès aux vaccins et aux traitements vitaux contre la COVID-19, ce qui expose les femmes des pays les plus pauvres à un risque disproportionné.De plus, malgré le rôle central des femmes dans la réponse à la COVID-19, y compris en tant que professionnelles de santé de première ligne, elles n’ont pas les postes de direction qu’elles méritent. Pour aller de l’avant différemment et mieux, il faudra placer les femmes et les filles au centre de tous les aspects de la réponse et de la relance, notamment par le biais de lois, de politiques et d’une budgétisation sensibles au genre.Le rapport Progrès vers la réalisation des Objectifs de développement durable : Gros plan sur l’égalité des sexes 2021 présente les dernières données probantes sur l’égalité des sexes dans l’ensemble des 17 Objectifs de développement durable, soulignant les progrès réalisés depuis 2015, mais aussi l’inquiétude continue liée la pandémie de COVID-19, son effet immédiat sur le bien-être des femmes et la menace qu’elle représente pour les générations futures.  International Technical Guidance on Sexuality Education: An Evidence-Informed Approach Année de publication: 2018 Auteur institutionnel: Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) | United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) | United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) | United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) | World Health Organization (WHO) The UN International technical guidance on sexuality education was first published in 2009 as an evidence-informed approach for schools, teachers and health educators.Recognizing the dynamic shifts in the field of sexuality education that have occurred since then, an expanded group of UN co-publishing partners has reviewed and updated the content to respond appropriately to the contemporary needs of young learners, and to provide support for education systems and practitioners seeking to address those needs. The International technical guidance on sexuality education (revised edition) provides sound technical advice on the characteristics of effective comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) programmes; a recommended set of topics and learning objectives that should be covered in comprehensive sexuality education; and, recommendations for planning, delivering and monitoring effective CSE programmes. This revised edition of the Guidance reaffirms the position of sexuality education within a framework of human rights and gender equality, and promotes structured learning about sex and relationships in a manner that is positive, affirming, and centred on the best interests of the young person. It is based on a review of the latest evidence and lessons-learned from implementing CSE programmes across the globe. The revised Guidance reflects the contribution of sexuality education to the realization of multiple Sustainable Development Goals, notably Goal 3 on good health and well-being for all, Goal 4 on quality education for all, and Goal 5 to achieve gender equality.