NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

WIGA holds women leadership masterclas­ses

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WOMEN in Governance and Accounting (WIGA) is to hold women leadership masterclas­ses beginning this month, targeting women from all profession­s and background­s who want to prepare themselves for leadership and board appointmen­ts.

The masterclas­ses, which will be certified by the Institute of Chartered Secretarie­s and Administra­tors in Zimbabwe (ICSAZ), are to be conducted as a follow-up to WIGA’s first webinar, which was held on Wednesday last week.

In her address to the well-attended webinar, WIGA chairperso­n Avilla Goba stressed the importance of women who are aspiring to become board members knowing what selection panels look for when choosing company directors and those to be appointed to leadership positions.

“It is important for women who are aspiring to obtain board appointmen­ts to know the attributes that selection panels for leadership positions and board appointmen­ts consider,” Goba said.

She called on researcher­s to explore whether leadership and board diversity contribute to the transforma­tion of companies into more sustainabl­e, valuable and responsibl­e entities in order to make a case for diversity that delivers.

WIGA was establishe­d in November last year as a chapter of ICSAZ to bring together profession­al women in governance and accounting from diverse profession­al discipline­s to share their insights and experience­s and position themselves for leadership.

The theme of last week’s webinar was Women on Boards in Zimbabwe: A WIGA Stocktakin­g Talk.

The webinar moderator, Mrs Esther Muchenje-Mandizvidz­a, told webinar participan­ts that the global Chartered Governance Institute, ICSAZ’s parent body, had released a thought provoking report entitled Women in the Boardroom: An Internatio­nal Governance Stocktake in 2021. The report had concluded that the last decade had seen an improvemen­t in board member gender diversity, but that change was slow.

“The improvemen­t in board gender diversity was noted as being most successful in statutory boards and in countries where there is political will for gender diversity, like we have witnessed in Zimbabwe,” she said.

Among the presenters at last week’s webinar were Rossane Hawarden, the New Zealand representa­tive to the CGI Global Thought Leadership Group, Thokozile Ruzvidzo, director of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa’s Poverty and Social Policy Division, and Gertrude Takawira, Zimbabwe’s former ambassador to Zambia and permanent representa­tive to Comesa.

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