A 5 year strategic plan for MoGD: Yesterday, the Policy Department organized a
gender sector roundtable to strengthen the working relationship between the
MoGD, MACs (Ministries and Agencies), donor agencies and other partners. The
two-hour roundtable spearheaded by Minister of Gender, Julia Ducan-Cassell had
presentations by Annette Kiawu, Deputy Minister for Research and Technical
Services and Jewel Howard-Taylor, Senator from Bong County among the notable
ones.
Main takeaway points:
1.
The National Gender Policy (2009) looks
at direct intervention of the government to induct ‘gender mainstreaming’ in 4 areas – education, health, justice and agriculture.
2.
Each sector is mandated to produce sex
disaggregated data to understand the targeting of women in each of these
sectors.
3.
The recently formed Monitoring and
Evaluation (M&E) unit led by an international consultant Mabuya Mubarak has
come up with a rating system (Good/ Promising/ Fair/ Not Satisfactory) based on
a set of specific criteria.
4.
The process to institutionalize gender
within the budget (the new budget year starts 1 July) is being tried within the Finance Ministry,
albeit with a number of challenges.
My thoughts: Liberia’s vision 2030 sees the small West African country as a
middle-income nation, ruled by democratic principles and well on the way to
economic stability. Whilst the country will continue to receive substantial aid
chiefly due to the credibility of senior women leaders committed to rule of law
and democracy, the challenge will be to conceive and enact laws that bridge
the gap between the reality and improving situation in Monrovia and the rest of
the country (15 counties), that Senator Taylor referred to as the ‘real Liberia’.
Perhaps its a common trait in all developing nations: bridging the gap between one or more core developed areas and the rest of the nation that is lagging way behind.
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