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Making the Gender Equality Duty Real

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Making the Gender Equality Duty Real Dr Katrina Allen, Policy Officer Children in Scotland Project: Making the Gender Equality Duty Real for Children, Young People ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Making the Gender Equality Duty Real


1
Making the Gender Equality Duty Real
  • Dr Katrina Allen, Policy Officer
  • Children in Scotland
  • Project Making the Gender Equality Duty Real
    for Children, Young People and their Fathers
  • Aberdeen 9 March 2010

2
Introduction
  • Children in Scotland interest in gender equality
    issues
  • Gender Equality Duty
  • How project fits within broader gender equality
    picture
  • Survey background and results
  • Key issues to consider today
  • Next steps for project

3
Children in Scotland gender equality lens
  • Safeguarding
  • Physical, emotional development
  • Education, skills
  • Career paths
  • Preparation for parenting/caring
  • Safeguarding
  • Recognising influence fathers
  • engagement with fathers
  • Valuing caring roles

4
Making the GED Real project
  • Making the GED Real for Children, Young
  • People and their Fathers is a 3 year project,
  • funded by the Scottish Government Equality
  • Unit (2008-2011)
  • Broad project objectives
  • Monitor and report on the implementation of the
    GED in Scotland
  • Identify share good practice examples

5
Project focus on challenging
  • Gender stereotyping particularly associated
    with caring roles
  • Occupational segregation in professions serving
    children and young people

6
Project focus on promoting
  • Opportunities support for fathers to engage in
    positive parenting
  • Support for fathers (as well as mothers) in the
    workplace
  • Support for children young people to choose
    from full range of education career paths
    without reference to gender

7
Fathers definition
  • Term father(s) includes
  • biological and de facto fathers/male carers
  • (e.g. stepdads, foster fathers, non-resident
    fathers and grandfathers)

8
The Gender Equality Duty
  • Equality Act 2006 introduced the GED
  • ? general duty on public bodies to promote
    equality of opportunity eliminate unlawful
    discrimination
  • ? specific duties for listed Scottish public
    bodies include
  • - Publish gender equality scheme (2007)
  • - Assess impact of policies and practices on
    both women and men
  • - Set gender equality objectives, plan take
    action to achieve
  • - Report annually review progress every 3yrs
    (due 2010)

9
The GED does not mean
  • Single sex services should be cut
  • New single sex services should not be funded
  • Services must be provided on an equal basis for
    women men
  • Does mean
  • Different needs should be assessed

10
Gender Equality jigsaw
  • How do we achieve equality?

Equal Pay for equal work!
Tackle gender-based violence!
Value and support both women and men in every
workplace political arena
Value and support both men and women as carers
End occupational segregation!
11
Project within the bigger GE picture other
aspects of Gender Equality
  • National GED focus so far on
  • - Equal Pay (Equal Pay Statements a requirement
    of specific public sector duties Scotland)
  • - Occupational Segregation
  • - Violence against Women
  • Important not to lose sight of the connections
    between the different aspects of GE when focusing
    on specific areas!
  • Key link how we define feminine/masculine
    identity appropriate roles/attitudes/
    behaviours

12
Project within the bigger GE picture changing
social context
  • Men increasingly want to be more actively
    involved in childrens education development
    benefits recognised
  • Increasingly fathers expected to fulfill caring
    roles and women to develop careers
  • Increasing emphasis on work-life balance and
    shift towards cooperative shared parenting
    ideal
  • Job market shift from male-dominated industries
    to service sector jobs which are more open to
    women

13
Project within the bigger GE picture policy and
services context
  • Historical association of Gender Equality with
    womens rights challenge to engage men
    constructively with gender equality issues
  • Historical legacy of focus on mothers provides
    support but also reinforces traditional roles
  • Current positive parenting, early years focus
    recognition fathers role

14
Survey overview
  • Focus 4 key areas little attention GES/
    reporting
  • Engagement of fathers with services for children
    families
  • Recruiting men to childrens sector workforce
  • Challenging stereotypes in educational and career
    choices of children young people
  • Supporting fathers in the workplace
  • Aims
  • Collate base-line data to track national progress
  • Increase understanding of opportunities
    barriers
  • Systematically identify good practice examples

15
Survey methods
  • Combination qualitative quantitative questions
  • Invited all 32 LAs 14 NHS Boards to respond
  • 2 tailored questionnaires (LA, NHS)
  • Balance between strategic perspectives
    experiences of frontline staff
  • 131 responses from 30 LAs across education,
    childrens services, social work, human resources
    corporate services
  • 30 responses from 9 NHS Boards clinical staff,
    managers, policy equalities officers

16
Responses overview
  • Broadly positive about the GED its potential
    impacts
  • Highlighted a no. of weaknesses obstacles to
    effective implementation
  • Diversity of priorities in line with wide range
    of respondents
  • Disconnect between GES priorities and objectives
    activities within specific service areas
  • missed opportunity?

17
Strengths weaknesses
  • Key strengths
  • Effective systems in place
  • Training staff
  • Focused leadership
  • And appointing dedicated equalities officers
  • Key weaknesses
  • Delivering change in practice no. 1
  • Lack of management leadership coordination
  • Low levels awareness understanding gender
    equality issues

18
Obstacles to implementation
  • Lack of time capacity
  • Lack of staff buy-in to gender equality agenda
    (including managers)
  • Competing priorities equalities for service
    delivery
  • Perceived administrative burden
  • Gender equality treated as bolt-on not a core
    value in service delivery

19
3 tiers of engagement
20
Key messages
  • Targeting men/fathers requires thought to issues
    such as
  • Timing
  • Language
  • Images
  • Hooks to engage
  • Ongoing support

21
Key messages
  • Gender neutral gender blind if different
    needs missed
  • Gender issues in day-to-day practice can be a
    hard concept for people to understand when the
    system traditionally feels it should treat
    everybody the same
  • Lack of understanding from some quarters about
    why there is so much focus on equality when
    patients are treated as individuals

22
Key messages
  • Cultural change is not an easy or fast process
  • I was explaining local authority work to a P7
    class. I asked the pupils why we had so few
    women councillors. One girl said I think men
    are better at that sort of thing I did not hear
    any opposition from her fellow pupils
  • Consultation with a gender focus has been
    difficult There wasnt the interest in gender
    issues from either employees or community groups
    that there were for the other two equality
    strands of race and disability

23
In summary
  • GED Schemes Reports not capturing breadth of
    gender equality related activities approaches
    nor impacts
  • Substantial professional engagement with range of
    interconnected gender equality issues
  • Potential for gender equality initiatives with
    much wider benefits for children families as
    service users
  • High demand for info. opportunities to share
    practice examples

24
Questions for today
  • How can GED schemes reporting be better linked
    to wider, gender equality related practice?
  • How can we build coherent strategies that support
    long term cultural change complementary
    measures across service areas?
  • How can we get people more interested in gender
    equality issues?
  • How can we find the right balance between routine
    involvement of men in mainstream services
    tailored, men-only initiatives/services?
  • How do we target specific groups (e.g. men in
    childcare work, young fathers) without
    reinforcing stereotypes?

25
Next steps
  • Summary report of 2 events
  • Website development
  • case studies
  • links to other sites/info. sources
  • Follow-up survey 2011
  • And finally

26
  • Contact
  • Kat Allen, Policy Officer, Children in Scotland
  • Email kallen_at_childreninscotland.org.uk
  • Tel 0131 222 2440
  • http//makinggenderequalityreal.org.uk
  • Thank you!
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