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State of women in developing world termed dire
Tuesday, 31 October 2006 16:38
By JIM GENARO

For the United Nations to meet its five Millennium Development Goals, it will need the support of national and regional governments, as well as investment from the private sector, Dr. Roger Coate told an audience of about 40 people at UNC Ashevilleës Reuter Center last Wednesday night.

Coate, who is a professor of international relations and director of the undergraduate program in international studies and political science at the University of South Carolina, presented his talk, titled "Women in Development: The Continuing Crisis" to the Western North Carolina Chapter of the United Nations Association of the U.S.A.


"Whatës a crime is whatës happening ÇƒÓ or not happening ÇƒÓ in developing countries in terms of education of the poor," Coate said. This is crucial, he added, because education is the foundation for making improvement on all of the U.N.ës Millennium Development Goals.

The MDGës, he explained, are five priorities established by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan in 1999, with the intention of combating the major challenges facing the worldës poor before 2015.

The professor focused on the impact on women worldwide of three of the U.N. goals: achieving universal primary education; promoting gender equality and empowering women; and improving maternal health.


"The world, as a whole, is way off-course," Coate told the audience.


Maternal health, particularly, has seen only minimal progress in recent years, he noted. In sub-Saharan Africa, for instance, the chances of a woman dying in childbirth is one in 16, he said. By contrast, in the U.S., the rate at which women die during labor is only one for every 3,800 pregnancies.


Furthermore, childbirth is the leading cause of death among women in the world, Coate said, even though the vast majority of these could be prevented with even a moderate degree of prenatal care.

The problem is worse in societies that encourage young people to marry early, he said.

"Adolescent girls, whose bodies are not yet fully mature, are particularly susceptible," Coate noted. Girls who give birth between the ages of 10 and 14 are five times more likely to die in childbirth than women ages 20 to 24, he added.


In many places, cultural biases against contraception have contributed to these problems, Coate said. In Africa, for instance, only 20 percent of women use modern forms of birth control.


In terms of gender equality, the degree of progress that has been made depends on which criteria is used. The U.N., Coate noted, uses four major standards for determining a member stateës degree of gender equality. These include the enrollment of girls in primary and secondary education, literacy parity, the share of women in non-agricultural wage employment and representation in government.


Coate said that while developing countries often have a greater percentage of representation by women than the developed world, on the rest of these standards, the developing world is greatly lagging.


Particularly in terms of education, a great disparity exists between men and women in developing countries, he noted. While religious biases contribute to the problem ÇƒÓ particularly in Muslim countries ÇƒÓ other institutional challenges often prevent women from attending school as well, Coate said.


For instance, the requirement of most primary and secondary schools in Africa that students purchase school uniforms is a serious detriment to the ability of many young people ÇƒÓ particularly girls ÇƒÓ to go to school.


 "If the income of the family is less than $200 a year, how can you afford uniforms?" Coate asked, rhetorically.


Many families in the third world choose to keep their daughters at home to work, rather than pay for them to go school.


He added that this phenomenon is not as bad in the impoverished former Soviet Union, where state socialism held a more egalitarian ethos.


After outlining the problems facing women in developing countries, Coate posed the question, "What needs to be done?"


The answer, he said, relies on the support and participation of the governments of the countries that are most in need.


In many of these states, cultural biases make it difficult for western aid workers to make inroads, Coate noted. For instance, in Muslim countries, many people object to efforts by non-Muslims to promote gender equality.


"My Muslim counterparts say that womenës equality contradicts their culture," he told the audience. "I have a hard time arguing with that."


He added that this represented "not a clash of civilizations, but a clash of cultures" that is difficult to overcome.


Other challenges to progress in developing countries comes from the outside, he said. One of the biggest problems is the effect of structural readjustment policies imposed by the World Bank on developing nations that owe large debts to it. Many countries entered such agreements during the 1980s and 1990s, Coate noted. These plans typically "urged cutting social services to pay debt," he said. Education, which is invaluable in the long-term, but in the short-term shows little financial payoff, was often the first thing cut, Coate added.


On the other had, the U.N. has been successful at combating poverty in the developing world through an innovative program known as "microfinancing," Coate told the audience.


This program focuses on providing economic assistance to individuals through small loans that allow them to invest in their own livelihoods.


Through the program, a lender might offer a farmer a loan of "a couple hundred dollars so they can get a cow, get a couple of chickens," Coate explained.


This program has been widely successful at combating poverty, he said, and is popular among fiscal conservatives because it encourages capitalism and self-empowerment.


Furthermore, recipients of the loans typically have a high likelihood of repaying their debts, Coate noted.


In terms of combating maternal mortality, the picture is bleaker, he said. Though the problem could be easily fought, Coate said, the money to do so has simply not been allocated.


The U.N. estimates that to provide adequate prenatal care for the majority of mothers in the developing world would cost between $12 billion and $18 billion, he said.


"Eighteen billion dollars ÇƒÓ how much do we spend a day in Iraq? One billion dollars a day," Coate told the audience. "And yet one mother dies every minute."

 



 


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