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The G20 and Gender Equality: How the G20 can advance women's rights in employment, social protection and fiscal policies

Wakefield, Shawna
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2014-07-14
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Briefing paper
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36
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<p>Across G20 countries and beyond, women are paid less than men, do most of the unpaid labour, are over-represented in part-time work, and are discriminated against in the household, in markets and in institutions. In 2012 in the Los Cabos Declaration<em>, </em>G20 leaders committed to tackling the barriers to women&rsquo;s full economic and social participation and to expanding opportunities for women in their countries.</p> <p>Oxfam and the Heinrich B&ouml;ll Foundation support this commitment, and this paper calls on the G20 to assess its agenda and act on its commitments to women&rsquo;s rights and gender equality. During the Australian presidency, the G20 has the chance to make good its promises for truly inclusive growth &ndash; working to make women more resilient to economic crises through gender-sensitive economic growth and gender-equal employment policies.</p>
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English
French
Spanish
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978-1-78077-604-0
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