Commonwealth Local Government Forum

West and Central Africa \ Women in local government

Gender equity is a priority for CLGF members and the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth is working towards gender equity and has set a target of a minimum of 30 per cent of women in public life – both in elected leadership positions and administration – including at the local level. A key focus is developing strategies to increase women's participation in decision making.

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Monitoring women’s representation in local government SDG indicator 5.5.1b

Presentation for workshop on women representation in local government. Section 1. Why women’s representation in local government matters Section 2. Background of SDG indicator 5.5.1b Section 3. What is local government and how is it organized Section 4. Sources of data for SDG indicator 5.5.1b Section 5. Reporting data for SDG indicator 5.5.1b

Author: Ionica Berevoescu Publisher: UN Women Publication year: 2019


Indicator 5.5.1(b): Proportion of seats held by women in local governments

Author: UN Stats Publisher: UN Stats Publication year: 2019


Women’s Representation and Participation in District Assemblies in Ghana: Analysis of Supply-Side and Demand-Side Framework

The quest for increased female representation and participation at the local level government in Ghana has not been obtained probably because we have neglected the demand and supply side factors that account for the paucity of policies and programmes to promote participation of women in the local government system in Ghana. Women involvement in decisionmaking processes in governance for sustainable development is very critical not only because they constitute majority of the Ghanaian population but they are discriminated and underrepresented in the socio-economic and political development activities thereby bringing about not only a gender gap but also exclusion of women and their needs, interests and perspectives from governance. This paper examines the demand and supply side framework so as to prompt stakeholders in their bid to enhance the presence of women in the local government system in Ghana. It also looks at the concept of local government system in Ghana and examines the statistics of women’s representation in the district assemblies. It concludes that women must strive to empower themselves by acquiring the knowledge, skills, resources (i.e. time, money) and motivation. NGOs, political parties as well as government and its agencies should put in place positive discriminatory policies and programmes as well as legislations that will bring social change to encourage and attract women in local level governance.

Author: Janet Serwah Boateng and Isaac Kosi Publication year: 2017


A Framework for Developing Gender Policies for Political Parties

This Framework outlines key considerations for developing a party’s gender policy, and addresses a variety of thematic areas essential for the advancement of women and promotion of gender equality within political parties, including leadership formation, internal decision making, internal oversight and institutional development, candidate recruitment, party programmes and platform development, outreach to voters, and campaigns.

Author: International IDEA Publisher: International IDEA Publication year: 2017


Gender in Local Government A Sourcebook for Trainers

This Sourcebook was developed to provide readily available and usable gendersensitivematerials and resources to build local government capacity for sustainable, equitable and inclusive human settlements.

Author: Prabha Khosla, Bernhard Barth Publisher: UN-HABITAT Publication year: 2017


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