The Fiji Times

Progress and challenges

- ■ MILES YOUNG is the Director, Pacific Community (SPC) Human Rights and Social Developmen­t (HRSD) division. The views expressed in this article are the author’s and not of this newspaper.

INTERNATIO­NAL Women’s Day on March 8 is a time to celebrate the remarkable achievemen­ts of women and girls across the Pacific and globally. This is also an opportunit­y to reflect on progress and challenges in the journey toward equal opportunit­ies for women and men, in all their diversity.

This Internatio­nal Women’s Day — and every day of the year — we want to accelerate and celebrate women’s achievemen­ts, in line with this year’s United Nations theme ‘Invest in women: Accelerate progress’.

As the Pacific’s principal scientific and technical organisati­on - governed by 27 members and serving 22 member Pacific Island countries and territorie­s — the Pacific Community (SPC) is committed to ensuring gender is integrated as a priority across all our work, especially in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM). SPC continues to invest in women in STEM and other areas to accelerate scientific and technical progress for all Pacific peoples.

With our work at the intersecti­on of the human sciences and STEM more broadly, SPC supports our government­s, civil society and other partners with technical support in people-centred developmen­t which encompasse­s a rights-based approach, gender equality and social inclusion, and positive expression­s of Pacific culture, alongside the protection and sustainabi­lity of the environmen­t. Gender equality is not a ‘women’s issue; it is a matter for every woman and man, in all their diversity, because inequality lowers all of us — it harms our families and communitie­s, costs our economy, and impairs our potential. We each have a critical role to play in promoting gender equality and can take personal responsibi­lity for this; on this issue, we need the collective effort of the whole Pacific pulling together.

SPC’s commitment to gender equality includes a commitment to enhancing the representa­tion of women in leadership roles within SPC and ensuring that women at SPC meaningful­ly inform and participat­e in the strategic and programmat­ic direction of the organisati­on.

In supporting our 22 member Pacific Island countries and territorie­s in promoting gender equality, SPC applies the collective learning of the regional working group on family protection/domestic violence legislatio­n, along with last year’s priorities document for technology-facilitate­d gender-based violence that is endemic in our region.

By investing and working with our government­s, civil society, faith-based organisati­ons and other partners across the Pacific region, SPC is seeing an increase in the incredible work led by women in communitie­s. We are, for example, seeing women farmers in Palau becoming entreprene­urs in the agricultur­e sector and innovators for the certificat­ion of organic produce; the Pacific Women In Maritime Associatio­n (PacWIMA) supported by SPC and with 10 state-led associatio­ns has been a driving force behind the establishm­ent of the Internatio­nal Day for Women in Maritime now observed annually on 18 May; and, in Fiji’s Nakalawaca Village, women are for the first time accredited with a boat master licence and use a solar-powered boat to double the productivi­ty for local fisher women.

These are just some of the achievemen­ts of women we can celebrate, and examples of how SPC is working with partners to ensure gender equality is integrated across our collective work.

Of course, there is still work to be done to ensure women and men, and girls and boys, equally share access to health and other services, to political participat­ion and representa­tion, economic participat­ion, and are equally able to live a life free from violence and discrimina­tion. In the Pacific, over 60 per cent of women (two of every three) have experience­d intimate partner violence at least once in their lifetime – twice the global average.

While the rate varies across the region, no country is exempt; high levels of violence afflict us all. Research repeatedly tells us that increasing equal opportunit­ies for women and men directly contribute­s to reducing domestic and family violence.

As men and boys increasing­ly take an active role in advancing gender equality, the region has already establishe­d contextual­ly relevant recommenda­tions in the Warwick Principles: Best practices for engaging men and boys in preventing violence against women and girls in the Pacific.

This year’s theme of ‘Invest in women: Accelerate progress’ outlines five key areas needing joint action to shape a better future for all: ending poverty; implementi­ng gender-responsive financing; supporting feminist change-makers; shifting to a green economy and care society; and investing in women as a human rights issue.

While all areas are important, we have a particular focus on investing in women as a human rights issue — especially through SPC’s Human Rights and Social Developmen­t (HRSD) division, which houses SPC’s core gender program supporting gender equality work across all SPC divisions and projects.

This is because gender equality doesn’t exist in isolation; it cuts across every sector of our economy and society — and as this year’s UN theme for Internatio­nal Women’s Day states: “Investing in women is a human rights imperative and cornerston­e for building inclusive societies; progress for women benefits us all.”

 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? SPC’s Principal Strategic Lead - Pacific Women and Girls, Mereseini Rakuita, left, supports the integratio­n of gender into all progamming across SPC, including at the Centre for Pacific Crops and Trees (CePaCT), with lab technician Rohini Prasad.
Picture: SUPPLIED SPC’s Principal Strategic Lead - Pacific Women and Girls, Mereseini Rakuita, left, supports the integratio­n of gender into all progamming across SPC, including at the Centre for Pacific Crops and Trees (CePaCT), with lab technician Rohini Prasad.
 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? Ensuring gender is integrated across science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM) and other areas is a priority for the Pacific Community (SPC).
Picture: SUPPLIED Ensuring gender is integrated across science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM) and other areas is a priority for the Pacific Community (SPC).

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