Gender equality at the heart of
Decent Work campaign - Youth employment: Breaking gender barriers for
young women and men

Press release - 11 August 2008
GENEVA (ILO News) - Despite efforts by the international community,
gender stereotyping and employment barriers continue to affect millions
of young women and men around the world, said the International Labour
Organization today on the occasion of International Youth Day.
Five years after International Youth Day raised the issue of high unemployment
and under-employment rates for young people, the ILO is calling for
renewed attention on behalf of governments and social partners to avert
the growing youth employment crisis. One billion young people will reach
working age within the next decade.
It is imperative that we work together to strengthen the productive
potential of young women and men, said Juan Somavia, Director-General
of the International Labour Office.
The particular dimensions of youth employment vary according to sex,
age, ethnicity, educational level and training, family background, health
status and disability, among others. But the overall picture shows that
the labour force participation rates for young women are far lower than
those for young men.
Equal access to quality education and training for girls and boys remains
the best start to finding decent work. However, even where young womens
education levels are the same or higher than mens, young women
face more difficulties in the transition to working life because of
continued labour market discrimination. And when they do find a job,
it is often lower paid and in the informal economy, making them more
vulnerable to poverty and marginalization.
A key employment challenge is tackling occupational segregation
of traditionally accepted male and female jobs,
and to break the gender barriers in opening up professions to both sexes,
explains Geir Tonstol of the ILO Bureau for Gender Equality. In
many countries young women are still encouraged to train in relatively
low-skilled and poorly paid feminine occupations with little
prospect of upward mobility, while young men are encouraged to go into
modern technology-based training and employment, which often pay better.
As part of its year-long campaign on Gender Equality at the Heart
of Decent Work, the ILO is actively promoting decent employment
for young women and men everywhere, highlighting that rather than being
viewed as a problem, the inflow of young people into the labour market
should be recognized as an enormous opportunity and potential for economic
and social development.
Document
> Youth
Employment: Breaking gender barriers for young women and men
- Gender equality at the heart of decent work, Campaign 2008-2009
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- Youth Employment: Breaking gender barriers for young women and men
- Gender equality at the heart of decent work, Campaign 2008-2009
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- A man's job? A woman's job? Says who...?! Breaking gender barriers
for young women and men - Gender equality at the heart of
decent work, Campaign 2008-2009
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- A man's job? A woman's job? Says who?! Breaking gender barriers for
young women and men - Gender equality at the heart of decent
work, Campaign 2008-2009