Contents |
Data Base Composition
The data base is structured around key building blocks of gender equality, including "Access to Resources such as Education and Health", "Political Empowerment of Women" and "Women's Economic Status". The GID-DB also contains information on "Social Institutions" such as cultural practices and social norms that affect gender equality. By providing information on these hidden instances of gender discrimination, the data base complements existing data compilations such as the UNDP Human Development Report, the World Bank's GenderStats or the Gender Gap Report by the World Economic Forum.
Accessing the Data
The data can be accessed via the OECD website (http://www.oecd.org/dev/gender/gid) or directly on Wikigender.
- Family Code
- Social Institutions
- Composite Indicators
- Literacy Rates
- School Enrolment
- Health
- Political Empowerment
- Economic Status of Women
Measures of Social Institutions
The GID data base structures social institutions into following categories:
- Family Code, including information on marriage customs and decision-making power within a household.
- Physical Integrity, capturing violence against women through traditional practices such as female genital mutilation or other attacks (e.g. rape, assault, harassment).
- Civil Liberties, measuring the extent to which women can participate in social life (e.g. moving freely in public without the obligation to wear a veil or be escorted by male relatives).
- Ownership Rights, indicating the quality of women’s access to property, either in the form of bank loans, land, or other material assets.
Information on cultural and traditional practices that impact on gender equality is coded between 0 (indicating equality) and 1 (indicating high inequality) depending on the extent of discrimination and the size of the female population that suffers from the application of a specific social institution. For example, if 20 per cent of the female population in a country report restricted access to inheritance (e.g. as a rule, daughters only get half the amount granted to sons), the variable for inheritance would be 0.10 (20 per cent * 0.50).
Composite Indicator of Gender Equality
Based on the social institutions indicators, the OECD Development Centre also introduced a composite indicator of gender equality: the Social Institutions and Gender Index (SIGI). Given its exclusive focus on social institutions, the SIGI is a highly specialised measure of gender equality and should not be confused with comprehensive measures such as the Gender-related Development Index or the Gender Empowerment Measure.
See also
External links
- OECD Gender, Institutions and Development Data Base on OECD.Stat
- OECD Podcast on the GID Data Base
- Gender Equality as Smart Economics - A New World Bank Group Action Plan, at the World Bank "Gender and Development" site.
- Gender, Development and the HIV Epidemic, at the UNDP site.
- Gender, Poverty and Development
- Perspectives: Gender Matters—OneWorld.net's living magazine.
- Gender Statistics - at the Social Institutions and Gender Index official site
Log in
Edit
Discuss
Official Page 



