NATIONAL COMMISSION ON GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT The The Impact of Development Impact of Development Cooperation Cooperation in Reaching MDGs in Reaching MDGs Presented by: REGINA G.MWATHA (Ph.D) CHAIRPERSON, NATIONAL COMMISSION ON GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT KENYA Development Cooperation Forum Helsinki, Finland June 3 rd -4 th .2010
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NATIONAL COMMISSION ON GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT The Impact of Development Cooperation in Reaching MDGs Presented by: REGINA G.MWATHA (Ph.D) CHAIRPERSON,
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NATIONAL COMMISSION ON GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT
TheThe Impact of Development Impact of Development CooperationCooperation
in Reaching MDGs in Reaching MDGs Presented by: REGINA G.MWATHA (Ph.D)
CHAIRPERSON, NATIONAL COMMISSION ON GENDER AND DEVELOPMENT KENYA
Development Cooperation Forum Helsinki, Finland June 3rd-4th.2010
Convention on the Elimination of all forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)
The Nairobi Forward Looking Strategies for the
advancement of women (NFLS)
The Beijing Platform of Action
The MDGs
AU Protocol- signed and not ratified
EAC Treaty
National Gender Policy (2000) Sessional Paper No 2 of 2006 on Gender
equality and development Sexual Offences Act, 2006 National Vision 2030 goals National Medium Term Plans 30% Presidential directive on public sector
that all employment and promotion must be women
Kenya External Resources Policies- Almost complete
Proposed new constitution- being debated
To initiate the implementation of the 2005 Paris Declaration on ‘Aid Effectiveness’, the Government of Kenya (GoK) has set up a four tier hierarchy aid coordination structure for donors to better harmonize, align, and coordinate their activities.
the Aid Effectiveness Group (AEG) at technical level, discussing specifically the technical support from aid.
Donor Coordination Group involving the donor community for harmonising themselves
The high-level Development Partnership Forum convened by the Prime Minister that discusses additional issues including political that may affect implementation of programmes
The National Executive and Social Council chaired by the President discuss policy at the highest level in the country
1998, the establishment of the Gender Donor Round Table (GDRT). Designed as a platform for discussion on the implications of the Paris Declaration for gender equality and to coordinate activities among players, GDRT fostered strategic engagement in a process of donor harmonization, alignment and coordination (HAC) and awareness-raising among members on gender equality issues in Kenya
The development of the Kenya Joint Assistance Strategy (KJAS) 2008-2012 provided the framework for donor support to national development planning, and gave impetus to several initiatives to address gender equality.
The framework for expansion has been the Kenya Vision 2030 and the Medium Term Plan (MTP), which has focused on rapid growth with macroeconomic stability, rehabilitation and expansion of infrastructure, investment in human capital, strengthening institutions of governance and revitalizing productive sectors.
In line with the 2002- 2007 Economic Recovery for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERWEC) the Vision 2030 and the MTP was designed by taking full cognizance of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Aid Effectiveness Group (AEG) meets once every month while the Development Partnership Forum meets four times a year
2005 the GOK created the Public Finance Management Reform coordinating Unit (PFMR) to serve as a secretariat or focal point to coordinate reforms. PFMR constituted by government and development partners
After the Post election violence of 2008
The Truth Justice and Reconciliation commission -2009
National Cohesion and Reconciliation cohesion -2009
Independent Interim Electoral Commission- 2008
Aid has focused largely on:
Gender-based violence issues;
Governance, human Rights and justice systems
Education and health,
HIV and AIDS just to mention a few key areas
Commitment to support resources (capital human resources) for national gender machineries to capacitate them deliver on their mandate
A purposeful direction in programmatic gender mainstreaming in all government sectors And partnered at all times with the national gender machinery at the national level
More focus needed in the actual
implementation of international and regional conventions and protocols as well as national laws that address gender and women rights issues more seriously
More focus needed in measuring implementation of international and regional conventions and protocols as well as laws that address gender and women rights issues more seriously
Support processes in the enactment of Laws and policies supporting gender equality and reviewing of laws and policies which are gender blind
Most resources are focused on infrastructure programmes which is good, but more needs to be done to support micro-finance and small enterprises for women and poor men accessing markets, on value addition, handling taxation, and connecting with local authorities
Micro-finance has been very successful in Kenya. This will directly impact on the MDGs of reducing poverty and hunger
The impact of development assistance need to be tracked using nationally agreed monitoring indicators developed by the local government and the development partners as well as civil society and the media.
More aid could flow in the arena of establishing baselines, which help measure up to date especially on poverty issues etc. This will enable monitoring take off from a known avenue.
Strengthen subsequent institutions on a single chain of service provision.
Gender Responsive Budgeting which is not getting a lot of attention from development partners is critical for the response and preventions of GBV; in ensuring equality on the all the other MDGs and for Kenya the Pillars of the Vision 2030
Although GRB is tedious and takes long to get results, studies in developing countries and in Africa show that high Gender Budget Support recipients have performed better, often significantly so, in the four MDGs covering primary enrolment, gender parity in education, child mortality, and access to water, and also in terms of improvements in the Human Development Index, in the period 2002-2007. This finding applied across all ODA recipients, across ACP countries only, and (with the exception of child mortality) across Africa (Jonathan Beynon and Andra Dusu 2010)
Need to increase use of existing financial and procurement systems to cut the cost of aid delivery as indicated in Paris Declaration
Need to increase the programmes especially to government parastatals and national gender machinery through the basket funding rather than Appropriation in Aid ( A in A) because it is difficult to monitor by the respective national government
At the national level programming and consequent financial disbursements could try and adjust to the national financial budget year