A rather disillusioned observation was recently made during a pan-Africa conference: Africa women consider new information and communication technologies as "futuristic" rather than a tool for development to be used today. If initiatives are not taken now to thwart this attitude, activities by women in Africa to promote sustainable development that also benefit them will take event longer. This will be especially true in regions on the continent where English is not the common language.
· Des hommes comme les autres ? · De la biologie à l'analyse de genre · La hiérarchie des droits · La mise en oeuvre de la Plate-Forme d'Action de Beijing · La Section I de la PFA : "les droits fondamentaux de la femme" · Droits économiques et politiques : participer à la prise de décision · La "Déclaration de Luxembourg" · De l'égalité de genre à la lutte contre les disparités dans le monde · Références
Assessing the impact of twenty-five years of action to promote the discontinuation of female circumcision (FGM) in Francophone West Africa, should consider a key issue: the contribution of the digital revolution, and how young people - girls and boys - have been associated. As victims, subjects, objects, actors, citizens, leaders and family and community stakeholders, FGM is for them a matter of concern. Youth, ICTs and FGM reveal gender issues that must be transversally integrated in public, private, citizen and personal development policies. This is the main message of this book, which presents the results of an innovative action research conducted by ENDA Tiers Monde, with the participation of girls and boys in Burkina Faso, Mali and Senegal. The study is in the French language.