- Contribute to the strengthening of the institutional capacities of the Mozambican authorities to provide inter-sectoral and integrated responses and address gender violence;
- Support social mobilization and community participation, especially of women leaders, in preventing and responding to gender-based violence and women’s economic empowerment; and
- Promote the institutional capacities of the Mozambican national authorities to formulate and implement public policies and strategies to promote women’s economic autonomy.
Gender Equality: Innovations and Potential in Trilateral South-South Cooperation
March 17, 2019
Challenge
The Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action represented a major milestone for womens rights, prompting the creation of national mechanisms for women´s empowerment worldwide. Nevertheless, for most countries, gender mainstreaming across a number of executive bodies and service providers, as well as the implementation of multi-sectoral policies, remain a challenge.
Gender continues to be a central issue for the development of communities and countries. Across the globe, gender inequalities have an enormous impact on the life experience of women and girls, and can manifest themselves as discrimination, oppression and violence. Actions and policies to end violence against women have received greater attention and investments, varying in scale, duration, and outcomes. Yet, fewer initiatives aim to achieve social protection and economic empowerment for women. South-South cooperation may lead to identifying and sharing best practices, helping to address existing gaps and prompting more robust policy approaches to gender equality.
Towards a Solution
The project, ”Brazil and Africa: Fighting against poverty and empowering women through South-South cooperation”, brought together the Governments of Brazil and Mozambique in a trilateral South-South cooperation arrangement that also included the support of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) and the United Kingdoms Department for International Development (DFID). From 2015 to 2017, the joint initiative generated an innovative approach to promoting gender equality and ending poverty, aimed at fulfilling three specific objectives: