Gender and education for all : the leap to equality / UNESCO.
Material type: TextLanguage: Series: ; (EFA global monitoring report ; 2003 | ; 4)Publication details: Paris : United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 2003.Description: 416 p. : col. ill., charts ; 28 cmISBN:- 9231039148
- LC 213 .G46 2003
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | LC 213 .G46 2003 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 21331 |
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B 4.11 MCC -14232 Reconstructing Balkh : the vaqfiya of 947/1540 / R.D. McChesney | Pamphlet DS 357.6 .S65 .D86 /1960 Afghanistan's big gamble [photocopy] / by Louis Dupree. | Pamphlet DS 375 .K2 .R44 /2003 Rehabilitation of Baghe Babur / Aga Khan Trust for Culture, Historic Cities Support Programme. | LC 213 .G46 2003 Gender and education for all : the leap to equality / UNESCO. | Pamphlet DS 374 .B28 .G65 /1969 Abbasid mosque at Balkh / Lisa Golombek. | Abbasid mosque at Balkh / Lisa Golombek. | Pamphlet HQ 1735.6 .A34 2004 Afghanistan : “no-one listens to us and no-one treats us as human beings” : justice denied to women. |
Includes bibliographical references.
Contents: Executive summary (p. 16)—Chapter 1. Rights, equality and education for all (p. 23)—Chapter 2. Towards EFA : Assessing progress (p. 33)—Chapter 3. Why are girls still held back? (p. 115)—Chapter 4. Lessons from good practice (p. 155)—Chapter 5. From targets to reform : national strategies in action (p. 191)—Chapter 6. Meeting our international commitments (p. 231)—Chapter 7. Gendered strategies for EFA (p. 265)—Annexes.
Summary: All countries have agreed to eliminate gender disparities in primary and secondary education by 2005. In its opening chapter, this second edition of the EFA Global Monitoring Report sets out the powerful human rights case for achieving parity and equality in education. Chapter 2 monitors progress towards the six EFA goals through a gender lens. The next two chapters look at why girls are still held back and highlight policies that can lift barriers and improve learning. Strategies to remove gender gaps in education are part of a much broader reform effort underway in many countries, as chapter 5. shows. This agenda cannot be met without much bolder international commitments and better co-ordination, which is assessed in chapter 6. It is in the interests of all states and peoples to remove the gender gap and it should be a top priority in all educational programmes, as the final chapter concludes—(p. 16).