Gender equality at the UN: the final push?

71 years ago, the United Nations Charter stated
that “The United Nations shall place no restrictions on the eligibility
of men and women to participate in any capacity and under conditions of
equality in its principal and subsidiary organs”. In 1979, the year I joined
the UN, the General Assembly adopted the Convention to Eliminate All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women. Profound changes have since occurred in the workplace which should have made it easier to ensure gender
equality and empower women in the UN system. Think of flexitime
and telecommuting. Think of training on diversity and unconscious bias. Think
of all the digital tools now available for us to exchange best practices,
manage data and monitor the implementation of our policies. And yet…

And yet , 21 years after the Beijing Declaration and Platform of Action established a target of 50/50 gender parity at the professional and higher levels, progress in our ranks is simply too slow. In 2013, of the 32,000 staff employed by the UN in professional categories worldwide, 41.6% were women.
But they are fewer in the upper echelons of the secretariats, and system-wide,
only 30 per cent of Directors are women. Above that, the air is even thinner
for women, who represent only slightly more than a quarter of all top
executives.

How can the UN, which is supposed to spearhead the
implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals, including Goal 5 on gender
equality, be a credible actor for change when it finds it so difficult to reach
parity among its own staff, when talented women moving up the ranks still face
a glass ceiling and institutional bias and when many of its meetings and panels
feature only men? As a UN senior manager, I felt that it was no longer enough
for me to sit and complain about the state of things.

So last year, together with Ambassador Pamela Hamamoto, United States Representative to the UN in Geneva, and with the support of Women@TheTable,
we launched the International Geneva
Gender Champions
initiative through which Champions commit to practical,
impactful and measurable ways of operationalizing gender measures in their
workplaces. At the heart of this initiative is the panel parity pledge. It
demands that both genders need to be represented in all panel discussions. In
addition, each Gender Champion chooses two other concrete and measurable
commitments for gender equality in their organization. With already close to
120 Champions, the initiative is really changing the way we do business in
International Geneva.

One of my own commitments, as a Gender Champion, was to
introduce a Gender Policy for the UN Office at Geneva, which I head.
With the support of UN Women, the policy came into force on 1 September 2016. It aims to establish an organizational culture free from gender bias and
discrimination, improve the representation of women at all levels so we can reach
gender parity, and ensure gender equality and the empowerment of women in all
aspects of our work. Of course, it will only truly make a difference if all
staff and managers, men and women, understand it, accept it, embrace it and
implement it. We all have a role to play.

With its many partners, the UN works to improve the life of
billions of people around the world. It will only succeed if men and women are
equally represented in all its processes. Ignoring half of humankind will
simply lead us nowhere. It’s high time for meaningful change! 2016-08-31-1472657571-5648966-mmquotepic2.png

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It Turns Out Trump Isn’t Speaking To Black Churchgoers In Detroit

Big buzz garnered this week around news that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump would be delivering his first speech before congregants at a black church in Detroit, Michigan.

It turns out, it was all a farce. 

Trump’s campaign announced the event on Monday claiming that the candidate would attend Great Faith Ministries to address churchgoers to “outline policies that will impact minorities and the disenfranchised in our country” and answer questions “that are relevant to the African-American community,” according to a statement from Trump surrogate Pastor Mark Burns.  

Instead, according to the Detroit Free Press, Trump’s appearance will only include a one-on-one interview with the church’s pastor Bishop Wayne T. Jackson. The interview, which will be conducted on the church’s Impact Network, won’t air to the public until at least one week after it’s taped. 

“He’ll be here Saturday. He’s going to sit in service and have the experience in the black church, and then he and I will be in this office and do an interview for the Impact Network that will be aired later on,” Jackson told the paper. “Just like any visitor, there will be fellowship at the service, and he can talk to people one-on-one.”

Trump’s resignation from speaking to black voters in Detroit comes on the heels of a new push from his campaign to expand his outreach efforts to black communities. However, so far, attempts to court the black vote, which have been laid out in a number of troubling speeches, have sparked criticism around Trump for merely reinforcing his own base of white, anti-black supporters than to show any real concern for the issues black voters demand that candidates address. 

Jackson, who told the Detroit Free Press that he has always voted for Democrats, said he feels the same way. He also said he plans to ask Trump if he’s a Christian, and if he’s racist.

“He needs to come to African-American communities,” he told the paper. “You can’t talk to African Americans in white venues.”

However, Jackson still believes Trump’s visit, which may include a private meeting with a small group of church-goers, will be beneficial in some way.

“My congregation trusts my judgment,” he said. “They know that I’m not going to put anything or anyone in front of them that I feel is going to be harmful, and I feel we should have an educated conversation about what you’re going to do.” 

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

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Lenovo’s latest convertible tablet brings a drawing pad into the fold

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Today, Netflix made it official. Stranger Things will return for season two, continuing the stories of Mike, Will, Dustin, Lucas, and their adult counterparts. Now, the show’s creators, the Duffer Brothers, have revealed a few additional details about the second season.

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These Are Your Five Favorite Desktop Computer Speakers

Nearly 200 of you sounded off in the nomination round
to help us find your five favorite computer speaker systems. But there can only be one, so check out the nominees, vote at the bottom of the post, and turn up the volume in the comments to stump for your pick.

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The Highs And Lows Of VR Gaming, Five Months In

It remains
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Intel Changed the Name of Its Dinkiest Processor and It Will Definitely Confuse You

Buying a laptop with Intel on the inside often boils down to two choices. Do you go with the potent Core i processor like the i5 or i7, or do you save some money (and battery life) and grab the super low powered Core M processor usually reserved for tiny tablets? Core i and Core M, despite both coming from Intel, are very different families of processors and provide very different services to a computer user. So it’s kind of bullshit that Intel, with the release of Kaby Lake
, has quietly changed the name of two Core M processors (the m5 and m7) and is now calling them i5 and i7 processors.

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Cordcutting Isn’t a Bargain Anymore

Are you hooked on all those CBS shows like Angel From Hell, Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders, and Kevin James Makes That Face Again? Well, pretty soon you’ll be able to watch them all on demand and commercial-free thanks to CBS’s new streaming service tier. And it’s just $10, roughly the same price as Netflix, which by comparison only has a huge catalogue of popular movies and TV shows that people actually want to see.

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Why Humans Will Never Live Off Sunlight

Imagine if we could be like plants, lying outside all day soaking up sweet, sweet energy from the sun. Doesn’t sound like a bad life, does it? So why aren’t the world’s best minds figuring out how to hack photosynthesis into humans?

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72 Hours in Model Horse Mecca

Horses are the one inescapable fact of Lexington, Kentucky—home to BreyerFest, the model horse Comic-Con, an annual convention for one of the last hobbies nearly untouched by culture at large.

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