SIGI 2024 Regional Report for Southeast Asia
Time to Care
What are the structural barriers to women's empowerment and inclusive development in Southeast Asia? Building on data from the fifth edition of the SIGI, the SIGI 2024 Regional Report for Southeast Asia: Time to Care provides new evidence-based analysis on the progress and setbacks in eliminating the root causes of gender inequality in 11 countries of the region. It underscores how multiple personal status laws perpetuate gender-based legal discrimination. The analysis also shows that social norms governing gender roles and responsibilities worsened between 2014 and 2022, particularly affecting women’s educational and economic rights.
The report explores a critical policy area for the region, the care economy. Stressing the gendered, informal, and unpaid dimensions of care, it draws on social, demographic, educational and economic evidence to forecast a growing demand for care services in Southeast Asian countries. The report advocates for the strategic development of formal care systems as a unique opportunity to accelerate women's economic empowerment, build inclusive societies and strengthen the region's resilience to external shocks – including those induced by climate change. To dismantle the barriers that prevent the emergence and expansion of such a formal care economy, it provides concrete recommendations to policy makers and other stakeholders.
Discrimination in social institutions in Southeast Asia
This chapter provides a regional overview of the SIGI results in Southeast Asia. It underlines the progress achieved and challenges remaining with respect to discriminatory social institutions, accounting for the specificities of the region – notably the diversity of its legal systems governing women’s status in the family sphere. Building on the analysis, the chapter identifies the priority action areas to accelerate progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals. It provides tailored policy recommendations to address the root causes of gender inequality in the region and ensure that all women and girls of Southeast Asia can live their lives fully empowered.
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