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Financement de l’Égalité de Genre
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  • DOMAINES DE TRAVAIL
    • PLANIFICATION ET BUDGÉTISATION
    • TRANSPARENCE ET RESPONSABILITÉ
    • EXPRESSION ET INFLUENCE
    • GOUVERNANCE LOCALE
  • TEMPS FORTS
  • RESSOURCES
  • ONU MUJERES

TYPE OF CONTENT

  • Highlights 1
  • Resources 1

THEME

  • Accountability and Transparency 2
  • Gestion des finances publiques 1
  • Planification et budgétisation 1
  • Suivi et plaidoyer budgétaires 1
  • Tracking Budget and Expenditures 1

RESOURCE TYPE

  • Recherche 2
  • Données et statistiques 1
  • Suivi et évaluation 1

REGION

  • Americas and the Caribbean 1
  • Global 1

COUNTRY

  • Argentine 1
  • Bahamas 1
  • Barbade 1
  • Brésil 1
  • Chili 1
  • Colombie 1
  • Costa Rica 1
  • El Salvador 1
  • Guatemala 1
  • Guyana 1
  • Honduras 1
  • Jamaïque 1
  • Mexique 1
  • Panama 1
  • Pérou 1
  • République dominicaine 1
  • Trinité-et-Tobago 1
  • Venezuela, République bolivarienne du 1
FOUND 2 RESULTS
Sustainable Development Goal Indicator 5c1
Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Indicator 5.c.1 “Proportion of countries with systems to track and make public allocations for gender equality and women’s empowerment” has been recently reclassified as Tier II by the Inter-Agency Expert Group on SDGs. The indicator measures progress towards Target 5c of the SDGs to “adopt and strengthen sound policies and enforceable legislation for the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls at all levels”. It links the policy and legal requirements for gender equality with resource allocations for their implementation. By tracking resource allocations, governments introduce deliberate measures into the planning and budgeting cycle to meet their gender policy objectives such as eliminating gender based violence or increasing women’s employment. By making these allocations public, governments commit to higher levels of transparency and accountability in budget decision making.
Gender and Corruption in LAC
The recent release of the Global Corruption Barometer (GCB) – Latin America and the Caribbean is an important step for understanding how corruption affects women. Based on a survey of more than 17,000 people in 18 countries across the region, the report reveals new data that could help develop more gender-responsive anticorruption programmes and policies.
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