The long road to gender equality – the next push forward

Published: 24 September 2010 y., Friday

Biuro darbuotoja
A proposed new plan focuses on closing the pay gap and opening up company boardrooms to more women. Tackling domestic violence is also a top priority.

Despite the progress made towards equality in recent years, women, on average, still earn 18% less than men in the EU. They are also under-represented in top decision-making roles and far more likely to be victims of domestic violence.

As well as being a fundamental right, gender equality is also crucial for the EU’s growth and competitiveness. Getting more women in the job market will help the EU meet its 75% employment target by 2020.

“To get the engine of growth going again, Europe needs to make better use of women's talents, including in the top jobs,” says justice commissioner, Viviane Reding.

The new five-year gender equality strategy proposes boardroom quotas and other measures to get more women into upper-management positions. The plan also aims to increase the number of women overall in business and self-employment and to set up an annual awareness-raising event, “European equal-pay day”. Each year the EU will invite employers, trade unions and other interested groups to a gender equality dialogue, to assess progress.

The EU is also planning action to combat domestic violence – with overwhelming public support.

The strategy will also look at areas where men are currently disadvantaged, with measures to improve fathers’ access to parental leave and reduce the school drop-out rate for boys.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

New Yorkers take a dip in dumpsters

Hundreds of New Yorkers enjoy a dip in rubbish dumpsters that have been converted into swimming pools as part of the city's summer initiative. more »

Lithuania funded the reconstruction of a school in Southern Afghanistan

On 19 July, a school, which had been reconstructed with the funding from Lithuania’s Special Mission in Afghanistan, was opened in the village of Suri, the Zabul Province in the South of Afghanistan. more »

Self-employed workers to gain maternity and pension benefits under new EU law

Self-employed workers and their partners will enjoy better social protection – including the right to maternity leave for the first time – under new EU legislation that enters into force today. more »

Valuable Ansel Adams negatives found

A 45 U.S. dollar garage sale purchase turns out to be long lost Ansel Adams negatives worth 200 million dollars. more »

Boy survives three-floor fall

A Turkish toddler survives a three-floor fall from a balcony when he lands on a stack of plastic pipes. more »

Dead penguins found in Uruguay

Around 200 Magellan penguins, most of them dead, wash up on Uruguay's beaches. more »

Europeans call for more action on road safety in survey

Europeans are calling on Member States to boost their efforts to improve road safety, according to a survey published by the European Commission today. more »

Dementia patients on the rise as China’s population ages

With an increase in life expectancy in China has come an accompanying rise in dementia cases, which may leave the younger generation struggling to cope with treatment and care. more »

Turtle hospital full in Gulfport Mississippi

These baby sea turtles should be swimming in the Gulf of Mexico, but instead they are recovering at the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Mississippi. more »

Argentina's Siesta Hotel

Reviving the Latin American tradition of the afternoon siesta, a hotel in Argentina brings siesta to the corporate workforce. more »