Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan

Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan


12-06-2011, 11:06 PM


  » http://sudaneseonline.com/cgi-bin/sdb/2bb.cgi?seq=msg&board=350&msg=1323212800&rn=0


Post: #1
Title: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: Deng
Date: 12-06-2011, 11:06 PM



Published on United States Institute of Peace (http://www.usip.org)


Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan


Special Report


Nada Mustafa Ali

Summary
•South Sudan’s independence ends decades of conflict as well as socioeconomic and political marginalization at the hands of successive governments in Khartoum, which affected women in gender-specific ways. Independence thus opens up opportunities for women’s economic and social empowerment, ensuring that the new country’s political and economic structures and institutions reflect commitments to women’s participation and human rights. In turn, empowering women will enable South Sudan to strengthen its economic and political structures and institutions.
•There is great potential for gender equality and respect for women’s rights in South Sudan. The government has expressed commitments to equality between women and men and to women’s participation. South Sudan is relatively egalitarian and lacking in religious extremism. International actors interested in South Sudan recognize that promoting gender equality and women’s empowerment and addressing gender-based violence (GBV) are key to maintaining peace and security and helping South Sudan’s economy grow.
•Challenges abound, however. South Sudan is severely lacking in infrastructure and has some of the worst human development indicators worldwide. Social and cultural practices harmful to women compound the effects of conflict and marginalization. There are constant internal and external security threats, a limited understanding of gender equality, and a tendency within communities to view gender as an alien and illegitimate concern, given the acute problems that South Sudan faces.
•The government of South Sudan, with the support of regional partners and the international community, should ensure that gender equality and women’s rights are fully integrated into and are outcomes of state building. National planning, developing the permanent constitution, and building the country’s new institutions and structures should reflect commitments to gender equality and input from women and women’s groups across South Sudan. The government should cost and meet the full budgetary needs of the Ministry of Gender, Child, and Welfare; ratify and implement the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women and the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa; strengthen efforts to prevent GBV and address the needs of GBV victims and survivors; and invest more in quality and accessible health and education.

About the Report

Part of a series of U.S. Institute of Peace reports on state building in South Sudan, this report asserts that equality between women and men and among women—as well as women’s security, economic empowerment, and meaningful participation—should be central benchmarks to state building in South Sudan, not only as a matter of principle, but also as a means to overturn years of conflict and marginalization. Gender equality is essential to building a strong and equitable economy and to ensuring a functional state that maximizes the full potential of all South Sudanese. The report is based on field research in Juba in February 2011 as well as previous and follow-up research by the author. It examines the risks and opportunities associated with gender and state building in South Sudan, analyzes priorities that South Sudanese women interviewees identified, and recommends ways to make the new state responsive to and reflective of the needs of all South Sudanese women and men.

About the Author

Nada Mustafa Ali is a part-time faculty member in global studies at the New School University in New York and a consultant and activist. She held visiting fellow or associate positions at Fordham University, the Five College Women’s Studies Research Center, and the International Center for Research on Women. Formerly she was women’s program coordinator at the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, Africa women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch, and consultant at the United Nations Development Programme. She received her PhD in government from Manchester University in 2000 and holds an MA from the American University in Cairo and a BSc from the University of Khartoum, both in political science.

South Sudan
Sudan
The Two Sudans
Conflict Analysis and Prevention
Gender and Peacebuilding
Negotiation and Diplomacy
Political Reform
Post-Conflict and Peacekeeping Activities
Rule of Law


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Source URL: http://www.usip.org/publications/gender-and-s...outh-sudan[/left][/B]

Post: #2
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: Deng
Date: 12-06-2011, 11:12 PM
Parent: #1

The full report


http://www.usip.org/files/resources/SR%20298.pdf

Post: #3
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-07-2011, 00:39 AM
Parent: #2

الأخ دينق

سلامات، و كل الشكر لهذا البوست حول التقرير الخاص بالنوع أو الجندر و بناء الدولة فى جنوب السودان، الذى تشرفت بكتابته، و الذى صدر حديثا عن مركز الولايات المتحدة للسلام.

و أتطلع لرأيك فى البحث و التقرير و التوصيات، التى أتمنى أن تسهم فى أن تكون المساواة القائمة على النوع و حقوق النساء فى صميم عملية بناء الدولة و البناء الوطنى فى دولة جنوب السودان.

مع تحياتى

ندى

Post: #4
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: Rihab Khalifa
Date: 12-07-2011, 09:37 PM
Parent: #3

most interesting ya Nada. I did not manage to read the full report yet, but got round skimming over the summary provided in Deng's posting. As i was reading it, I recalled a topic that i wanted to write about, but did not get round to it. That is the topic of Gender Sensitive Budgeting. Women, children and the elderly would benefit greatly from such practice.

it is an initiative that started years ago, and now taking shape as many governments are responding positively to its effects
I am part of two groups that work on this, one that advises HM treasury in the UK on the issue of how governments expenditure for example affect women and children
so with the advent of every budget the groups becomes very active
and the other group is a European based one, which is more of a network where we try to advance this cause

I hope both governments (North and South), will utilize this as a tool to serve those sectors in the community better.

http://www.wbg.org.uk
http://egbn.eu/

http://www.gender-budgets.org/

Post: #5
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: Rihab Khalifa
Date: 12-07-2011, 09:38 PM
Parent: #4

PS Thanks Deng

Post: #6
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-07-2011, 10:15 PM
Parent: #5

Many thanks for your kind words, Rihab, and I look forward to your post on gender-sensitive budgeting, which is an extremely important tool as you wrote; and women activists and academics have worked so hard over several years until it became a policy issue and it should be an issue and a focus in both Sudans..

Many thanks for the links to UN Women's website on the topic, and it is great to know you are a member of the Women's Budget Group. Professor Diane Elson was the head of Graduate studies at Manchester University when I was a graduate student there.

best regards and thanks to Bakri as well.

nada

Post: #7
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: Deng
Date: 12-08-2011, 03:10 AM
Parent: #6

Quote: سلامات، و كل الشكر لهذا البوست حول التقرير الخاص بالنوع أو الجندر و بناء الدولة فى جنوب السودان، الذى تشرفت بكتابته، و الذى صدر حديثا عن مركز الولايات المتحدة للسلام.

و أتطلع لرأيك فى البحث و التقرير و التوصيات، التى أتمنى أن تسهم فى أن تكون المساواة القائمة على النوع و حقوق النساء فى صميم عملية بناء الدولة و البناء الوطنى فى دولة جنوب السودان.


الأخت ندى.

لا شكر على واجب يا عزيزتي.
لقد أطلعت على على معظم التقرير وسوف أعود اليه مرة أخرى.
شكرا على مجهودك المقدر جدا.

Post: #8
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: بريمة محمد
Date: 12-08-2011, 04:58 AM
Parent: #7


Quote: و أتطلع لرأيك فى البحث و التقرير و التوصيات،

حمده فى بطنه.

بريمة

Post: #9
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-08-2011, 02:09 PM
Parent: #8

الأخ العزيز دينق،
شكرا لكلماتك الطيبة و اتطلع لاسهامك فى النقاش حول محتوى التقرير بعد اكمال قراءته.

لقراء البوست

أدناه الوصلات للتقارير الأخرى حول بناء الدولة فى جنوب السودان

النفط و بناء الدولة فى جنوب السودان
http://www.usip.org/publications/oil-and-stat...lding-in-south-sudan

الوحدة و االتنوع و بناء الدولة فى جنوب السودان للدكتور جوك مدوت جوك

http://www.usip.org/publications/diversity-un...lding-in-south-sudan

الشباب و بناء الدولة فى جنوب السودان

http://www.usip.org/publications/dowry-and-di...lding-in-south-sudan

Post: #10
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-08-2011, 02:11 PM
Parent: #9

بريمة محمد

شكرا للمرور

Post: #11
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: mona altom
Date: 12-08-2011, 09:11 PM
Parent: #10

is so nice and great effort Dear nada Ali
I didn't read the full report yet , but I try to read it in the comming week_end Inchaalah. I hope the south Sudan government put an account for such sensitive topics like this. Of course gender and childeren are so important for sustainable developement which lead to peace and new country institution bulding

Deng salam

Post: #12
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-09-2011, 12:21 PM
Parent: #11

Dear Mona Altom,
Greetings and thank you so much for your input here. As you wrote, gender equality and responding to the needs of women (and of children and other social groups of course) is very important to sustainable peace and development in South Sudan and beyond.
I look forward to your feedback and suggestions. Happy reading over the weekend.
nada

Post: #13
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: Elmoiz Abunura
Date: 12-09-2011, 02:57 PM
Parent: #12

Dear George

Thanks for sharing the report with us


Dear friend Nada

I really appreciate your contribution . I will share the report with Afaf, and others. I have read the report on Oil, and will send my comments to the author. I wonder if you are in Boston or New York? We are back from Beirut.
Regards to Khalid and the family

Post: #14
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-10-2011, 02:02 PM
Parent: #13

Hello Elmoiz and thank you so much for your kind words and for forwarding the link to Afaf. PLS send her my regards as well. I am very interested to know what you think about the issue of oil in South Sudan as well.

It is great to know you guys are back to the US (PLS check the Messenger). I am between Boston and New York. Khalid sends his regards

nada.

Post: #15
Title: Re: Nada Ali: Gender and Statebuilding in South Sudan
Author: nada ali
Date: 12-11-2011, 01:09 PM
Parent: #14

*****