These are some of the conclusions reached in the
Report, "Clearing a Path for Girls" written and published by the NGO
Working Groups on Girls. Based on responses to a survey by 248 NGOs in
87 countries, the Report aims to assess progress in relation to Section
L, the separate section on girls in the Beijing Platform for Action of
the Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, China, 1995. The
Conference and Section L represent a turning point for girls. The Report
addresses government commitments, global and regional trends and many
examples of specific NGO programmes.
HIGHLIGHTS
OF THE REPORT
Government Commitments and Progress
Section L represents a global and public
acknowledgment by governments of widespread "discrimination against
girls from... their childhood and into their adulthood". NGOs from the
field report that many governments have made commitments to improve the
situation of girls. The majority of these commitments, they say, are
broad declarations to "mainstream gender" or "eliminate all forms of
discrimination against the girl child". Most followup actions fall into
a few categories including: adoption of new laws and policies;
appointments of new ministers; creation of new commissions and
organizing workshops. NGOs report the large gap between legislation and
enforcement and that the newly appointed ministers are rarely women. In
many cases they say that the visible progress at the national level does
not reach the grassroots populations. The surveys also reveal varying
levels of government cooperation with NGOs and their programmes, ranging
from meaningful collaboration to indifference or outright resistance.
Global Trends and Patterns:
While expected regional differences have surfaced in
the surveys, global trends are striking. Education and violence surfaced
as the two prevailing issues.
Education overall is viewed as the area where the
greatest progress has occurred. In developing countries, especially,
most of the progress is in primary education, in sharp contrast to
spotty or no progress in secondary education, math and science, gender
sensitivity of curricula and teachers, and, especially, retention in
school of adolescent girls. In industrialized countries, NGOs address
gender sensitivity in the classroom, discrimination in sports and, in
some cases, in science and technology.
Violence is seen as the most serious problem in all
regions and varies regionally from interfamilial sexual and physical
abuse, to female genital mutilation, infanticide, early marriage, and
commercial sexual exploitation. Surprisingly, the impact of armed
conflict is barely mentioned.
Health and Nutrition are reported to show progress in
most regions, although teenage pregnancy is a wide concern throughout.
Few references are made to HIV/AIDS, despite evidence showing sharp
increases among women and adolescent girls.
Economic Exploitation have drawn frequent comments
from NGOs, who cite minimum age labor laws, but also say that there is
little political will to implement them. Moreover, enforcement of
legislation does not reach the majority of girls who perform invisible
work.
Negative Cultural Attitudes and Practices emerge as a
highly critical area of concern within Asia and Africa especially, but
also among immigrant populations in some European countries.
The issue of "poverty and patriarchy" is highlighted
by reports from every region, respondents pointing out the strong links
between economic conditions and systemic and systematic discrimination
against women and girls.

08/08/2006