The document discusses the Commission on the Status of Women's 57th session held from March 4-15, 2013. It includes speeches from the Chair, Vice President of the Economic and Social Council, and Michelle Bachelet on the topics of violence against women, gender equality, and the need for global solutions and national implementation to address discrimination. The document also provides biographical information about Michelle Bachelet, highlighting her background and roles as President of Chile.
As part of its contribution to state modernization in Lebanon, and in line with its belief that promoting gender-balanced policies and approaches are vital enablers of good governance and sustainable development, and that it is only through women’s full and equal participation that the century’s global challenges could be overcome, the Institut des Finances Basil Fuleihan1 dedicates a special interest to developing women leadership in Government.
As part of its contribution to state modernization in Lebanon, and in line with its belief that promoting gender-balanced policies and approaches are vital enablers of good governance and sustainable development, and that it is only through women’s full and equal participation that the century’s global challenges could be overcome, the Institut des Finances Basil Fuleihan1 dedicates a special interest to developing women leadership in Government.
Concord Europe Anual Report 2016. European NGO Confederation for Relief and D...Dominique Gross
In 2016, CONCORD embarked on a new seven-year strategy.
The process started two years ago when members decided to
shift our priorities and change the focus as well as the way the
confederation works so far. The main objective was to work
transversally and avoid thematic sillos. Twenty sixteen was the
first year of implementation of the strategy.
This new strategy is based on two pillars of work supported by
key principles:
1. Making sustainable development a reality for all. European
policy promotes sustainable economic, social and human
development, addressing the causes of poverty and inequality,
and is based on human rights, gender equality,
justice and democracy.
2. An enhanced sharing and learning space to support our
sector in transition. The rights and responsibilities of citizens
and organised civil society, to influence those representing
them in governments and EU institutions, are
promoted and respected.
National policy conference 2017 international relationsSABC News
The International Relations Discussion Document reflects on the ANC’s historic mandate of progressive internationalism that shaped South Africa’s current foreign policy outlook
The steps through which a nation can be integrated and unified regardless of the cultural diversities and differences on the basis of caste, creed and colour. The simple but necessary steps to adopt for making the country integrated.
DESA News is an insider's look at the United Nations in the area of economic and social development policy. The newsletter is produced by the Communications and Information Management Service of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs in collaboration with DESA Divisions. DESA News is issued every month.
For more information: http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/newsletter/desanews/index.html
Concord Europe Anual Report 2016. European NGO Confederation for Relief and D...Dominique Gross
In 2016, CONCORD embarked on a new seven-year strategy.
The process started two years ago when members decided to
shift our priorities and change the focus as well as the way the
confederation works so far. The main objective was to work
transversally and avoid thematic sillos. Twenty sixteen was the
first year of implementation of the strategy.
This new strategy is based on two pillars of work supported by
key principles:
1. Making sustainable development a reality for all. European
policy promotes sustainable economic, social and human
development, addressing the causes of poverty and inequality,
and is based on human rights, gender equality,
justice and democracy.
2. An enhanced sharing and learning space to support our
sector in transition. The rights and responsibilities of citizens
and organised civil society, to influence those representing
them in governments and EU institutions, are
promoted and respected.
National policy conference 2017 international relationsSABC News
The International Relations Discussion Document reflects on the ANC’s historic mandate of progressive internationalism that shaped South Africa’s current foreign policy outlook
The steps through which a nation can be integrated and unified regardless of the cultural diversities and differences on the basis of caste, creed and colour. The simple but necessary steps to adopt for making the country integrated.
DESA News is an insider's look at the United Nations in the area of economic and social development policy. The newsletter is produced by the Communications and Information Management Service of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs in collaboration with DESA Divisions. DESA News is issued every month.
For more information: http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/newsletter/desanews/index.html
Discussing Gender and Internatonal Cultural RelationsDr Lendy Spires
Gender equality calls for women and men to have equal rights and entitlements to human, social, economic and cultural development, and an equal voice in civil and political life. This does not mean that women and men will become the same, but that women’s and men’s rights, responsibilities and opportunities do not depend on whether they are born male or female. The pursuit of gender equality has a long history. Especially in the West, it can be seen as an extension of the ongoing claims for liberty and equality unleashed by the French Revolution, when equality before the law became newly established as the basis of the social order.
Well into the 20th century, the extended struggle for the franchise has stood as the symbol of a much wider struggle by women playing a central role in extending, defending or giving substance to social citizenship rights. The call for equal rights for women resurfaced in the 1960s and 1970s alongside movements for civil and human rights, peace, the environment, and gay liberation. One of the major triumphs of this stage was the UN adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) in 1979, the first international human-rights instrument to explicitly define all forms of discrimination against women as fundamental human-rights violations. CEDAW emphasised women's individual rights in opposition to those traditionalists who defend major inequalities in the status quo as the ‘complementary’ roles for men and women that nature intended. It called for the equality of men and women in public and political life, before the law and with respect to nationality rights, in education, employment, the provision of healthcare (including access to family planning services), and in marriage and family matters.
Another high point was the constitution of the new South Africa (1996 – built on the Women’s Charter for Effective Equality and the ANC’s 1993 Bill of Rights), which emphasises the equal citizenship of women and men and people of all races, by making provision for equal protection under the law, equal rights in the family, and in all areas of public life. In the last three to four decades, this pursuit of gender equality has brought successive challenges to many major areas of social, economic and political life, beginning with a quest for equal representation in the corridors of power, but developing into a broader critique of masculine bias and ‘power politics’, and the search for forms of mutual empowerment.
Gender stereotypes are generalised views or preconceived ideas, according to which individuals are categorised into particular gender groups, typically defined as “women” and “men”, and are arbitrarily assigned characteristics and roles determined and limited by their sex. Stereotypes are both descriptive, in that members of a certain group are perceived to have the same attributes regardless of individual differences, and prescriptive as they set the parameters for what societies
deem to be acceptable behaviour. Stereotyping becomes problematic when it is used as a vehicle to degrade and discriminate women. Abolishing negative
gender stereotypes is essential to achieving gender equality, and the media are central to prompting this change.
More information:
www.coe.int/equality
gender.equality@coe.int
The Power of You is an article that highlights the power of an individual and the youth to improve the Human Rights of Women and the Power of Youth in improving society.
Hey All!
Here is the down-low on the special interests and mission statement belonging to Mary Cassatt and Ansel Adams. Thanks so much for you involvement!
click the title at the bottom to find the full screen option :)
Constitutionalism as an instrument for transformationSABC News
President Nelson Mandela said “I am not a saint, unless you think of a saint as a sinner who keeps on trying. Meaning that he too could and did err. None of us should therefore make a disingenuous attempt to undermine his hitherto unmatched leadership credentials on the basis that he erred in one or other respect, as if he ever held himself out as immune to error. And none of whatever errors he might have made can in the very least detract from the profundity of his contribution to the essence of practical ethical and selfless leadership. Generations to come, who genuinely care about fellow human beings will ceaselessly drink from Madiba’s well of wisdom-laden and ethical leadership.
≫ Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi Free Essay Sample on Samploon.com. Persepolis film review - A-Level Media Studies - Marked by Teachers.com. Persepolis photo essay on FlowVella - Presentation Software for Mac .... Persepolis Photo Essay- Connor Thomas - Screen 2 on FlowVella .... Persepolis essays - Select Expert Custom Writing Service. Unit 12 Animation Assignment By Kira Henry: 2.1 Essay: Persepolis Review. ⇉Religion In "Persepolis" Essay Example | GraduateWay.
Business Management Essay. Management essay examplesMorgan Hampton
Business management essay - PHDessay.com. Business Management Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... Extended Essay Template - 7+ Free Samples, Examples, Format Download. Business Essay on Influences Affecting Operations Management .... Business Administration Essay Example - Ubseisns. management styles essays. 7 Best Tips to Write a Great Business Management Essay .... Understanding School Business Management Essay Example | Topics and .... Essay On Advantages Of A Business Management Major - 651 Words - NerdySeal. How to write great business management essays by WetPapers - Issuu. ⇉An Analysis of the Different Business Management Styles Essay Example .... Essay on management (sample). Management Essay 1001 | MGMT1001 - Managing Organisations and People ....
Similar to Women in governance_Global_Classrooms_2014 (20)
Techniques to optimize the pagerank algorithm usually fall in two categories. One is to try reducing the work per iteration, and the other is to try reducing the number of iterations. These goals are often at odds with one another. Skipping computation on vertices which have already converged has the potential to save iteration time. Skipping in-identical vertices, with the same in-links, helps reduce duplicate computations and thus could help reduce iteration time. Road networks often have chains which can be short-circuited before pagerank computation to improve performance. Final ranks of chain nodes can be easily calculated. This could reduce both the iteration time, and the number of iterations. If a graph has no dangling nodes, pagerank of each strongly connected component can be computed in topological order. This could help reduce the iteration time, no. of iterations, and also enable multi-iteration concurrency in pagerank computation. The combination of all of the above methods is the STICD algorithm. [sticd] For dynamic graphs, unchanged components whose ranks are unaffected can be skipped altogether.
Adjusting primitives for graph : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
Graph algorithms, like PageRank Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) is an adjacency-list based graph representation that is
Multiply with different modes (map)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector multiply.
2. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector multiply.
Sum with different storage types (reduce)
1. Performance of vector element sum using float vs bfloat16 as the storage type.
Sum with different modes (reduce)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector element sum.
2. Performance of memcpy vs in-place based CUDA based vector element sum.
3. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (memcpy).
4. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Sum with in-place strategies of CUDA mode (reduce)
1. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
2. Declaration of Rights of thewomen of the United States
by the NationalWoman Suffrage Association
July 4th, 1876
O “The history of our country the past hundred years, has been a
series of assumptions ans usurpations of power over woman,in
direct opposition to the principles of just government,
acknowledge by the United States at its fundation:
First. The natural rights of each individual.
Second. The exact equality of these rights.
IDEA. These rights were included in almost every known
Declaration of Rights, but they should be appointed for both
genders men and women, since the very beginning.
3. Comission on the Status of Women
57th session. 4-15 March 2013
Ms. Marjon V. Kamara
Chair of the Commission on the Status of Women
O The struggle to end the scourge of violence against women and
girls is at the core of the gender equality movement
everywhere. It affects women and girls of all ages, of all
economic and social classes, of all races ans ethnicities, of all
cultures, religions and traditions. We have a common
responsability to act.
O We have assembled here with a clear mandate: to create a
world where gender equality is never in question and
discrimination and violence against women and girls are a thing
of the past. We can make this ambition a reality if we
demostrate the political will and commitment to agree on global
solutions and to implement agreed strategies at the national
level , to the limit of our resources. All eyes are on us […]
4. Comission on the Status of Women
57th session. 4-15 March 2013
Mr. Ferit Hoxha
Vice- President of the Economic and Social Council.
Permanent representative of the Republic of Albania
O Efforts to promote gender equality and the
empowerment of women are central to global economic
and social development. Indeed, we all are keenly
aware of the instrict linkages between gender equality
and realization of human rights, and development goals
as well as maintenance of peace and security.
O But as we refine(pulir, perfeccionar) our expectations for
the future, It is essential that we do not lose focus on
achieving the Millennium Development Goals by
2015.
6. Comission on the Status of Women
57th session. 4-15 March 2013
Michelle Bachelet
Opening statement. Time for action: Prevent and end violence
against women and girls”
O “Recent events and protests point to growing awareness
and momentum. Over the past few months, women,
men and young people took the streetd with signs that
ask “Where is the justisce?. They declare solidarity with
a Pakistani girl shot for defending the right to education.
They pledge justice for a young woman in India and
another in South Africa who were brutally raped and
later died”.
O Gratitude (Agradecimiento) I thank all of you who are
here today, Ministers and Ambassadors and
representatives of civil society, and all the people around
the world, who believe in a take action for the human
rights of women.
7. O Verónica Michelle Bachelet (born 29 September 1951) is a Socialist Party politician and
the President of Chile since 11 March 2014. She previously served as President from 2006–
2010, becoming the first woman in her country to do so. After leaving the presidency, she
was appointed the first executive director of the newly created United Nations Entity for
Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women). In December 2013,
Bachelet was re-elected as President of Chile with over 62% of the vote, bettering the 53.5%
she obtained in 2006. She is the first person since 1932 to win the presidency of her country
twice in competitive elections.[2]
O Bachelet, a physician with studies in military strategy, served as Health Minister and Defense
Minister under her predecessor, President Ricardo Lagos. She is a separated mother of
three and describes herself as an agnostic.[3] Aside from her native Spanish, she also
speaks, with varying levels of fluency, English, German, Portuguese and French.
8. Comission on the Status of Women
57th session. 4-15 March 2013
Ms. Frances Raday.
Vice-Chairperson of the Working Group on discrimination
against women in law and in practice.
[…] In addition to to the persisting cultural stereotypes, traditionalist
practices and patriarchal social institutions, which are root causes of
violence against women in the private sphere, women are subjected
to violence in the public and political space because they threaten
the existing male power hierarchy and because they are often seen
as challenging “traditional” notions of family.
We see discrimination and violence against women as inter-connected
phenomena. [..] The ending of violence against women
and girls is not an option but must be a priority for the
achievement of sustainable development, peace and security,
human rights, economic growth ans social cohesion.
I thank you for your attention and look fordward to engaging a
constructive dialogue with Comission (In your speech you can say
this as well by ending “with the rest of the delegates”
9. O This can be a powerful sentence to be used
at a possible moderate caucus:
O Thank you all who are in here today, debating
about the role of women in an equal society,
struggling for the present situation in many
countries which is completly unfair for women
and that we definitively have to change. But
for that we need you both women and men
working together.
12. Position Paper Tips (Recomendaciones)
Keep it simple. To communicate strongly and effectively, avoid flowery
wording and stick to uncomplicated language and sentence structure.
Make it official. Try to use the seal of your country or create an "official"
letterhead for your position paper. The more realistic it looks, the more
others will want to read it.
Get organized. Give each separate idea or proposal its own paragraph.
Make sure each paragraph starts with a topic sentence.
Cite your sources. Use footnotes or endnotes to show where you found
your facts and statistics. If you are unfamiliar with bibliographic form, look
up the Modern Language Association (MLA) guidelines at your school's
library.
Read and reread. Leave time to edit your position paper. Ask yourself if
the organization of the paper makes sense and double-check your spelling
and grammar.
Speech! Speech! Do you plan to make an opening statement at your
conference? A good position paper makes a great introductory speech.
During debate, a good position paper will also help you to stick to your
country's policies.
Let the bullets fly. Try not to let your proposals become lost in a sea of
information. For speechmaking, create a bulleted list of your proposals
along with your most important facts and statistics so that you will not lose
time looking for them during debate.
13. Committee: International Labor Organization
Topic: Globalization and Development
Country: Romania
*This sample position paper was submitted by the delegation of Romania at the 2007 UNA-USA Model UN Conference in New York
City.
In the past two decades the rapidly growing world trend has been toward globalization. With the emergence of the internet as a
means of communication and the increasing accessibility of international trade physical barriers are not the only barriers withering
away. Protective tariffs are plummeting and free trade agreements are becoming more prevalent. Romania appreciates that
globalization creates favorable situations for expansion of commercial as well as economic assets. In the past year Romania has seen
a foreign direct investment (FDI) increase of 199%. Inward FDI increased from EURO 234 million in 2005 to EURO 699 million in
2006. However, Romania realizes that increased globalization does not automatically produce more equality.
Globalization and Development can contribute to the advancement of the overall international human condition; however, the
delegation of Romania recognizes that without proper regulation the potential for advancement will remain limited to an elite few
individuals, businesses, and nations. Unless checked and aimed toward the common good, globalization cannot effectively serve the
global community. Crucial in dealing with the complexities of globalization, good governance must act with solidarity and
responsibility. Romania believes that in involving people in globalization we must promote moral values, democratic principals,
inclusive global political culture, institutions that safeguard both individual civil rights and inherent freedoms, and the common good. In
addition, coping with the influx of information from globalization governments must act with solidarity and insight. Access to digital
education will undoubtedly result in the confidence of citizens in their respective administrations and allow for a greater degree of
transparency, and therefore a lesser degree of corruption.
Romania believes the multinational business community has the ability and the obligation to support pertinent values in human rights,
labor standards, and environmental preservation. As stated by the president, Mr. Traion Basescu, Romania feels a "heartfelt
attachment to multilateralism, as an effective instrument designed to identify the adequate answers to the challenges brought by
globalization."
Romania is party to the majority of multilateral treaties and conventions identified as such by the Secretary General in the context of the
Millennium Summit in 2001. Romania has always supported innovative and effective ways of establishing cooperation within and
between regional organizations. As one of the newest members of the European Union, Romania is an active member of the World
Trade Organization, and looks forward to offering its support to the redirection of globalization to best