Education and Gender Equality: Concept Paper
Education and Gender Equality: Concept Paper
EDUCATION AND
CONCEPT PAPER
GENDER EQUALITY
Oxfam is guided by “Universal and Equitable access to Quality Education” and also the fact
that “lack of access and poor quality of education have serious consequences for especially
girls and women” (Oxfam Strategic Plan 2013-2019)..
This series of Oxfam IBIS concept papers define the Oxfam IBIS’ understanding and approach
in key areas.
JUSTIFICATION
Gender inequality is a serious and pervasive form of discrimination affecting especially women
and girls. Discrimination against women and girls is a major obstacle to obtaining their rights
as citizens as well as to the development of societies. Non-discrimination and equality be-
tween women and men are central principles of human rights law. The Universal Declaration
of Human Rights adopted in 1948 proclaimed the equal entitlements of women and men to
the rights contained in it, without distinction of any kind, such as sex. The obligation of states
to eliminate discrimination based on sex is also underlined in the International Covenant on
Political and Civil Rights from 1966. The recently adopted Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs) to be reached by 2030 also promotes gender equality and women’s empowerment.
Goal number 5 pursues to “Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls,” and
is an opportunity to address structural obstacles and shift social norms. This would potentially
enable permanent pathways out of poverty and inequality achieving the gender equality tar-
gets of the 2030 agenda. Gender equality is a right in itself, but it is also an important means
to achieving other sustainable development goals.
Education has the potential to play a crucial role in attaining gender equality, as documented
for example by UNESCO in Education transforms lives (2013). When a girl receives a quality
education, she is less likely to get pregnant young, be married early, be a victim of violence,
get a job or contribute as active citizen to the development of society. Educating both girls and
boys has a huge positive impact in terms of preventing gender inequality and gender based
violence. Evidence shows, that the more literate the women in a country are, the lower female
mortality rate and the better health and political integration of women.
Since the launch of the Education for All (EFA) movement in 2000, gender equality in edu-
cation has been considered necessary for social justice on a global scale. And yet, gender
inequality is also pervasive in education. Though significant progress has been made over the
last decades in narrowing down gender disparities at primary and secondary level, in most
parts of the world, girls and women are still disadvantaged in the education systems. Accord-
ing to the Global Education Monitoring (GEM) report 2015, about 43 % of the world’s out-of-
school children will never go to school: 48% of girls compared with 37 % of boys are likely
never to enter a classroom. Moreover, 500 million women above the age of 15 are illiterate,
compared to 281 million men, meaning that 64% of the adult illiterate population are women.
Fewer girls than boys get a secondary education, and even fewer get a higher education.
It should be noted though, that in some countries, boys are now at a disadvantage, for exam-
ple in some Latin American countries, girls are more likely to enrol in and complete their edu-
cation than boys. Since 2000 there has been a growing concern over boys ‘underachievement
in learning outcomes. According to the GEM 2015 research from Brazil, Rwanda and other
countries showed that men with less education were more likely to be violent in the home and
express discriminatory gender views. However, only a few countries have put in place policies
to address this concern. An education that promotes gender equality needs to be of good qual-
ity, explicitly aimed at addressing gender inequalities and transforming negative or rigid gender
norms and stereotypes. The quality and transformative character of education is crucial to en-
sure that gender inequality is not reproduced in the formal education system and in non-formal
education activities and later in life.
Achieving gender justice is one of the goals in Oxfam’s Strategic Plan 2013 – 2019. While
the reasons behind inequality between women and men are about more than money there is
CONCEPT PAPER: EDUCATION AND GENDER EQUALITY 3
no doubt that economic inequality compounds gender inequality. In the case of children who
have ever been to school, there is gender parity for middle income countries, but disparity at
the expense of girls in low income countries where 93 girls for every 100 boys have ever been
to school. Oxfam works to encourage women’s participation and transformative leadership; to
eliminate violence against women and girls and to improve women’s economic empowerment.
Oxfam believes in transforming gender - and related power relations - as well as the struc-
tures, norms and values that underpin them - by using education. This transformation is critical
to ending poverty and to empowering women to enable them to be global active citizens with
rights equal to men.
Gender equality
Gender equality refers to the equal rights, responsibilities and opportunities for women and
men and girls and boys to access and control social, economic and political resources, includ-
ing protection under the law. Equality does not mean that women and men will become the
same, but that there is equality of opportunity, i.e. that girls/women’s and boys/men’s rights,
responsibilities and opportunities will not depend on whether they are born male or female.
Gender equality is not a women’s issue but should concern and fully engage men as well as
women.
Gender justice
Oxfam IBIS understands gender justice as the full equality and equity between women and
men in all spheres of life, resulting in women jointly, and on an equal basis with men, defin-
ing and shaping the policies, structures and decisions that affect their lives and society as a
whole. This means that there is need both to continue improving legislation and policy, but also
to transform societies through sustained, widespread changes in attitudes and beliefs about
gender power relations. Oxfam IBIS envisions a safe and just world, where women and girls
gain power over every aspect of their lives, including not to be exposed to violence. When
women and girls are able to make their own choices and exercise their collective voice, and
when institutions address their needs and interests, gender justice will be achieved.
Gender mainstreaming
Oxfam IBIS is involved in an ongoing process to ensure that all our work across development,
humanitarian and campaigns programming incorporates the promotion of gender equality
and women’s rights. This process, known as Gender Mainstreaming (or integration), involves
gender justice considerations being built into all stages of policy making and programming.
4 CONCEPT PAPER: EDUCATION AND GENDER EQUALITY
This includes using gender and power analysis, set focus on girls and women’s rights’ objec-
tives and specific actions explicit addressing structural gender discrimination - and not just its
symptoms. As an organisation, we are committed to building the capacity of staff and partners
to focus on gender justice and girls and women’s rights and ensuring that gender is main-
streamed in all our policies, structures, practices and beliefs.
Barriers to gender equality in education: There are a number of factors that hinder gender
equality in education. They are related to equal access to education and equal competition
but also to chances of success. Some of these barriers are linked to the school/education, but
others are linked to the social and cultural perceptions of gender roles and responsibilities in
society, and to poverty, inequality and power relations. The table below developed by Oxfam
IBIS summarises some of the barriers related to gender inequality with a focus on girls and
adolescents girls in formal education.
Oxfam IBIS works to ensure not only equal enrolment of girls and boys but also an equal
number of male and female teachers. Many girls lack female role models, feel unrepresented
at their school and need female teachers to talk to – shortcomings which in some cases keep
girls from coming to school or make them drop out. Strategies we use to encourage female
teachers include providing secure transport between home and school, giving them economic
incentives and providing them with further training to ensure the quality of their teaching. Simi-
lar to ensuring possible role models for girls, it is also relevant to introduce learners to a differ-
ent approach to gender than the binary understanding.
6 CONCEPT PAPER: EDUCATION AND GENDER EQUALITY
Oxfam IBIS also support schools to work with the children themselves on gender equality, chil-
dren’s rights, etc. This work includes supporting girls’ school clubs, children’s parliaments and
adolescent girls’ summer camps, allowing them to talk about sensitive issues within a secure
and conducive environment. Quality educators can challenge the perception of what is under-
stood as ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’, including which related possible actions are available and
acceptable.
1. Quality Education
2. Transformative Education
3. Educator Professional Development
4. Youth Education and Training
5. Mother Tongue - Bilingual Education
6. Education in Fragile Situations
7. Education and Gender Equality