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Abramo, L. (Ed.). Trabajo
decente y equidad de género en América Latina.
(Decent work and gender equity in Latin America) Santiago, Chile:
ILO. 2006.
This book intends to contribute to the efforts made to advance
towards the definition of policies that may enable gender equity
through the promotion of decent work. It gathers the main results
of research and activities carried out by ILO experts within the
framework of work priorities in Latin America between 1999 and 2005.
It evidences the importance of considering the issue of gender equity
in the Decent Work Agenda of Latin America. It presents the progress
made in terms of the diagnosis of the issue and it indicates the
areas into which research should go deeper.
Aguirre, R.; Batthyány, K. (Coord.)
Labour, gender and citizenship in the countries of the Southern
Cone. Montevideo: Cinterfor/ILO, 2001. (Tools for Change 15).
It seeks to contribute to the research that is being carried out
now in the universities of the different countries of the Southern
Cone and, at the same time, make the society aware of the exclusions
generated by today's changes in the labour world. Female and male
researchers of Argentina, Chile, Brazil and Uruguay have participated
in an enriching conceptual and methodological debate regarding the
inclusion-exclusion of women in the labour world with a gender perspective;
the connection between the concepts of citizenship and work were
considered and different national experiences of equal labour opportunity
policies were analysed. The views offered by a broad scope of social
partners and politicians express the ease of access to dialogue
and the compromises assumed into the search of gender policies in
the labour world.
Chiappe, M.;
García and Santos, R. Participation,
productivity and training: The path of the Uruguayan Association
of Rural Women - AMRU. Montevideo: Cinterfor/ILO, 2005. 91p.
In order to fight against poverty and promote sustainable and inclusive
rural development, adopting a gender dimension and articulating
with the local productive and social environment are widely acknowledged
imperatives. This requires building up networks, mobilising multiple
resources and actors and, above all, a global analysis and a variety
of changes in which personal, family, productive and socio-political
dimensions are indivisibly articulated. In this sense, and as an
example, promoting a higher female participation and representation
through strong organisations committed to these principles has proved
to be a powerful and effective contribution.
Formujer Argentine.Occupational
Project. A training methodology to improve employability. Manual.
Buenos Aires: MTEySS, 2004
The objective of this material is to transfer the Occupational
Project's strategy as a training and counselling methodology in
order to reinforce the employability of individuals.
FORMUJER Programme.
Gender
and competency-based training: Conceptual contributions, tools and
applications. Montevideo: CINTERFOR/ILO, 2006
The experience gathered is showing that this approach can be a
frame of reference to work on the different components of any intervention
in the vocational training area. The intention of this publication
is to join these construction efforts, sharing reflections and experiences.
Fernández
Pacheco, J. (Ed.) Gender
and labour market: Honduras and Nicaragua. San José de
Costa Rica, ILO, 2003. Gender, Poverty and Employment Project in
Latin America
ICFTU. The
informal economy: women on the frontline.Trade Union World Briefing,
2.
While women are many times discriminated and edged out of the labour
world, they are strongly represented in the informal economy and,
trade unions of women in the informal economy have been emphasized.
Home-based textile workers in Argelia, Brazil and the United States,
street vendors in India and Moldavia, free-lance hairdressers in
Ghana, peasant farmers in Peru, home-based child carers in Croatia;
fishmongers in Chad
all have their tale to tell as trade unionists.
The fundamental trade union principle of solidarity is at stake,
but so is the very survival of the trade union movement worldwide.
ILO. Gender
Equality and Decent Work. Selected ILO Conventions and Recommendations
Promoting Gender Equality. Geneva, October, 2006.
International Labour Standards (Conventions and Recommendations)
are one of the ILO's primary means of action to improve working
and living conditions of women and men, and promote equality in
the workplace for all workers. ILO standards apply equally to women
and men, with some exceptions, in particular those standards addressing
issues relating to maternity and women's reproductive role. However,
there continues to be a gap between the rights set out in national
and international standards and the real situation of workers. These
rights must be made effective in practice. A major obstacle preventing
workers from exercising their rights is a lack of awareness of their
existence. Dissemination of information about these rights is, therefore,
a vital instrument for improving gender equality. This publication
is one element in that dissemination process. It brings together
in an easily accessible form a range of International Labour Standards
of particular relevance to the promotion of gender equality in the
w orld of work.
ILO. Identification
of Economic Opportunities for Women's Groups and Communities.
Series on Gender and Employment. Geneva: ILO.
This Guide was developed as part of the ILO Gender Promotion Programme
(GENPROM) "tool kit" on gender and employment. The main
target audience of the Guide is development and community organizations,
both governmental and non-governmental, and workers' and employers'
organizations working with local women's groups to identify and
to realize opportunities for more and better jobs. It is also intended
to assist ILO staff, in particular national project staff, who are
responsible for supporting these organizations and groups in their
efforts.
ILO. Main
Achievements and Challenges in Follow-up and Implementation of the
12 Critical Areas of Concern of the Beijing Platform for Action.
ILO Contribution 49th Session of the Commission on the Status of
Women United Nations, New York, 2005.
ILO. Women
and men in the informal economy: A statistical picture. ILO,
Geneva. Employment sector. 2002.
The purpose of this report is to provide a statistical picture,
using the available data, of the informal economy worldwide. The
statistics and indicators presented in this book are designed to
give a wide audience of users a better understanding of the size,
components and characteristics of the informal economy. Such information
is essential in formulating policies and programmes at national
and international levels to promote decent conditions of work as
well as contribute to poverty eradication.
ILO. Global
employment trends for women 2004. August ILO, Geneva.
ILO. Time
for Equality at Work. March 2003, ILO, Geneva.
Marco, F. Economics
and gender. Selected bibliography. Santiago de Chile: ECLAC,
2001. (Women and Development, 37)
This selected bibliography on economics and gender is part of the
activities of the ECLAC/GTZ project "Mainstreaming the gender
perspective in ECLAC and sectoral ministries". The main objective
of this project is to strengthen the institutional capacity of the
governments of Latin America and the Caribbean to formulate public
policies and economic and social development proposals that specifically
and effectively incorporate the principle of gender equity.
This document is intended to facilitate the exchange and dissemination
of information on gender and economics. It is also meant to contribute
to the research and analysis of phenomena associated with recent
processes of globalization and economic liberalization, and with
changes in the roles performed by women and men, and the development
policies adopted.
Piras, C. Women
at Work. Challenges for Latin America. IADB, 2005.
Women at Work presents a series of empirical studies that use household
survey data from Latin America to analyze trends in female labor
force participation rates, the impact of trade liberalization on
women's work, tendencies in gender wage differentials and occupational
segregation, and the gender implications of pension reform.
Silveira, S.
Gender
and employability: challenges and opportunities for vocational and
technical training in the 21st century in Latin America. Bulletin
N° 153 Vocational training, productivity and decent work. Montevideo:
Cinterfor, set, 2002.
Silveira, S.;
Matosas, A. Gender
and the informal economy in Latin America. New challenges and possible
answers through occupational training policies. Bulletin N°
155 Training in the informal economy. Montevideo: Cinterfor, 2003.
Singh, M. (Coord.)
Meeting
basic learning needs in the informal sector: integrating education
and training for decent work, empowerment and citizenship. Dordrecht:
Springer; UNESCO. UNEVOC, 2005. (Technical and vocational education
and training series, 2)
This anthology brings together basic facts and features about basic
learning needs and skills of people working and living in the informal
economy and presents case studies from different countries examining
educational and training strategies for meeting these learning needs.
The aim of this volume is to provide accounts of learning and training
programmes in the informal sector that range over the vast territory
of educational activity and give young people and adults an opportunity
to gain the knowledge and develop the values, attitudes and skills
which will enable them to improve their capacities to work, participate
fully in their societies, take control of their own lives and continue
learning. The programmes are significant in that they attempt to
integrate education and training. Special emphasis is placed on
the participation of all stakeholders, especially civil society
organisations and social movements.
Valenzuela,
María Elena.
Informality and Gender in Latin America. Working Paper No 60.
Geneva: ILO, 2005.
Informality has been a topic of interest in Latin America for decades.
Only more recently, however, has its important gender dimension
been more deeply explored. This Working Paper makes a valuable contribution
to the debate over informality, which is seen alternatively as an
opportunity for promising business start-ups and a poverty trap.
With the spotlight on microenterprises, the authors' insights reveal
a more complex reality with important gender differences.This Working
Paper forms part of the follow-up given by the International Labour
Office to the conclusions on decent work and the informal economy,
adopted by the International Labour Conference in 2002 (International
Labour Conference, 90th Session, Record of Proceedings, Provisional
Record, No. 25, 2002).
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