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March 9, 2015

The global gender gap persists, says report

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On March 9, the United Nations will convene to evaluate the global community's progress on gender equality in the 20 years since 189 countries adopted the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. The U.N. session will continue through March 20.

"Closing the Gender Gap," a new report by UCLA's World Policy Analysis Center (World), reveals that more than 170 have legal barriers preventing women and girls from experiencing the same rights, protections and liberties as men and boys.

World's new report and accompanying online resource bank take a heightened approach to global accountability and transparency by detailing the rights, laws and policies pertaining to gender equality in 197 countries and Beijing Platform signatories. The resource bank includes quantitatively analyzable data, policy briefs, mobile-friendly interactive maps, infographics, fact sheets and more.

Analysis by World shows that in most countries, continues to be embedded in national constitutions, laws and policies:

More than 150 countries lack protections critical to ensuring women's economic participation.

Sixty-one countries provide girls with less legal protection from early marriage than they do for boys.

Ninety-two countries guarantee paid leave to mothers of infants, but not to fathers, perpetuating inequalities in the burden of caregiving and limiting equal opportunities at work.

The U.S. is not immune from these concerns—here, for example, mothers are not ensured paid leave to care for their newborn children, making the U.S. the world's only high-income country not to provide such a guarantee. And while more than 80 percent of countries in the world have a constitutional guarantee of gender equality, the U.S. does not.

Yet the report findings indicate that progress is possible. More than 95 percent of the 56 new national constitutions adopted around the world in the past 20 years legally guarantee gender equality. Good legislation and policies exist in all regions and at all country income levels.

"Citizens need and deserve to know their rights and how their country fares when compared to others," said Dr. Jody Heymann, founding director of the World Policy Analysis Center and dean of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. "Only by getting data into the hands of citizens and leaders alike on what effective steps have been taken—and what haven't—can we close the in our global community."

The study examined whether laws treat women and men equally, and whether concrete steps have been taken to reduce inequality. Among the findings:

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Constitutions

Families and marriage

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Families and work

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Education

Economy and work

World's findings provide an opportunity to examine countries' progress in closing the gender gap, especially in critical areas that impact the daily lives of women and girls—access to quality education and the ability to remain in school, protection from child marriage, equal rights in employment, and policies that ensure health at work and at home.

"When the status of and girls improves, population health improves and the economic strength of companies and countries increases. Entire families, communities, and countries are lifted up," Heymann said.

The Maternal and Child Health Equity research program at McGill University helped develop longitudinal data on , breastfeeding breaks and maternal leave for the study.

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