1984年以来的妇女、人口和发展趋势。

H Ware
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文审查了1984年国际人口会议通过的六项建议在过去五年中取得的进展,这些建议具体涉及妇女状况。它们包括:1)使妇女参与发展;2)妇女参与经济;3)教育、培训和就业;4)提高结婚年龄;5)男子积极参与所有领域的家庭责任;6)批准《消除对妇女一切形式歧视公约》。确定并讨论了会议建议中遗漏的可能与人口问题有关的几个重要领域,即妇女的处境(特别是老年妇女、唯一养家糊口的妇女、妇女与移徙)和妇女在严重经济困难时期的处境。最后,强调了在妇女数据方面取得的进展,并建议对继续要求提供新数据持谨慎态度。与《提高妇女地位内罗毕前瞻性战略》相反,人们注意到这些建议暗示妇女的生理作用和经济作用之间存在着几乎无法解决的冲突。但是,有人指出,《消除对妇女一切形式歧视公约》关于男女完全平等的目标要求两性在参加劳动力方面都有同样的选择。虽然现在对过去5年中变化的速度和方向有一个明确的看法还为时过早,但作者发现不可能对目前的趋势持乐观态度,因为在太多领域,妇女方面的进展要么停滞不前,要么倒退。令人失望的记录部分归因于决策者倾向于将通过健全的经济政策促进经济增长和提高妇女地位视为相互竞争而不是互补的目标。
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Women, population and development trends since 1984.

This paper review progress over the past 5 years with respect to the 6 recommendations adopted at the International Conference on Population 1984, which specifically address the situation of women. They include: 1) integrating women into development, 2) women's economic participation, 3) education, training, and employment, 4) raising the age at marriage, 5) the active involvement of men in all areas of family responsibility, and 6) the ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. Several important areas potentially relevant to population issues which were omitted from the Conference recommendations are identified and discussed--namely, the situation of women (in particular, older women, women who are the sole supporters of families, and women and migration) and the situation of women in times of severe economic adversity. Finally, progress made with respect to data on women is highlighted, and caution is advised with respect to continued calls for new data. In contrast to the Nairobi Forward-Looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women, the recommendations are noted for implying an almost unresolvable conflict between women's biological and economic roles. However, it is pointed out that the goals of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women for full equality of men and women would require that the same choices be available to both sexes with respect to labor force participation. While it is too soon to have a clear perspective on the pace and direction of change during the past 5 years, the author finds it impossible to be optimistic about current trends because, in too many areas, progress regarding women has either stagnated or moved into reverse gear. The disappointing record is partially attributed to the tendency for policy makers to see the promotion of economic growth through sound economic policy and advancing the status of women as competing rather than complementary goals.

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