A checklist designed to ‘gender proof’ an electoral programme can serve as a helpful tool for practitioners working in electoral assistance. By systematically evaluating electoral assistance programmes through a gender lens, it is possible to better ensure that they address the diverse needs of women. This checklist is designed to help electoral assistance improve its gender-sensitivity and gender-responsiveness through all steps of an electoral process: before, during and after. It is critical to tailor any intervention or activity to the specific context where it is being implemented, for which a gender social norms assessment can be a helpful starting point. Please also see programmatic option ‘Conduct a social norms assessment’.
In most electoral contexts voters must be registered and appear on a voter list to be eligible to participate in an election. Such lists must be compiled in a clear and transparent manner to ensure inclusiveness. In some cases, voters are automatically registered by local authorities on the basis of residency, making it less likely that women are left off the lists, i.e. passive voter registration. However, active voter registration requires an eligible voter to actively register, which requires effective communication to ensure awareness including specific messages targeting female voters because registration-related challenges may be specific and different from challenges facing their male counterparts. Generally, it is important to ensure that women do not risk removal from the list if they change their name or address when they marry, for example. Wherever the civil registry is linked to the voter register, it is pertinent to consider the extent to which post-conflict societies tend to experience issues with voter lists due to high numbers of displaced people and refugees, a high proportion of whom are often women. Special procedures might be necessary to target such hard-to-reach populations to ensure inclusion and that no one is left behind.
In post-conflict societies where women traditionally might not have played a key or active role in electoral processes, voter education plays a strikingly critical role in enhancing women’s political participation. This often includes dissemination of information about voter’s rights, the political system and about available candidates.
Understanding the importance of privacy in electoral processes and secrecy of the vote is particularly important, especially in situations where one family member might attempt to cast ballots for the entire family.
Women play a number of different roles in electoral processes beyond voting, including as candidates, political party members, advocates or staff. The role of political parties is particularly important in determining the prospects for women aspiring to run for office. In order to ensure a fair, equal and balanced representation, political parties may adopt Temporary Special Measures (TSMs), such as quota systems.
In post-conflict societies, women tend to take an active part in civil society, grassroots movements and communities. These are also key arenas for women’s political participation that should be considered.
Practical measures, such as ensuring safety during polling, are critical aspects in any electoral process.
* Care responsibilities often refer to tasks related to caregiving in support of another person’s well-being, health and safety. For more information about the global care economy, which refers to the paid and unpaid labour related to caregiving such as childcare, elder care and domestic chores, read more here: https://www.ilo.org/global/topics/care-economy/lang–en/index.htm.
Violence against women in electoral processes is a global issue but one which remains underreported due to lack of data, stigma and the general ‘silence culture’ in which victims tend to not report cases because of lack of trust in reporting mechanisms and legal procedures. It is critical for any gender-responsive electoral assistance to ensure adequate reporting mechanisms, also considering online and offline violence.
Electoral practitioners report on the critical role media play in promoting inclusive and peaceful elections. In light of that, it is key to establish strong partnerships between media platforms and Electoral Management Bodies to ensure that messaging on the criticality of women’s participation in electoral processes is being broadcasted online and offline.
A wide variety of laws can affect women’s prospects for full participation in elections. Although the most evident one is the election law, other laws relating to political parties, citizenship, gender-based violence, personal status, the family and identity documentation for internally displaced peoples and returnees can also have significant impacts.
Trainings, educational events and awareness-raising on the importance of not only ensuring inclusion in elections, but specifically promoting women’s full participation, are critical throughout the electoral journey: pre-, during and post-elections.
Evaluating electoral assistance and electoral programmes against clear objectives and criteria related to gender-sensitivity is pivotal for improving their gender-responsiveness. Having robust monitoring and evaluation frameworks cleared and ready at the onset will help the programmes to ensure timely evaluation, as it otherwise risks being sidelined. Collecting gender-disaggregated data by Electoral Management Bodies on all aspects of the electoral process, to the extent possible – including voter behaviour, registration and participation – is critical to highlight any gaps and assess the impact of electoral assistance.
Post electoral periods may be moments when violence, intimidation and harassment continue to take place. It is therefore important to keep monitoring such incidents and keep reporting mechanisms open.
This checklist is designed to be used by any practitioners working in electoral assistance.
For this activity, whom to partner with will depend highly on the context. It might be of relevance to engage closely with civil society, particularly in contexts with a vibrant and active civil society, but it is also important to ‘look outside the box’ and beyond your usual suspects. That can include social media platforms (for media- and communication-related activities) or behavioural-change companies (to assess and monitor voter behaviours).
Costs will mainly be related to logistics, staffing and travels. In cases where it is advised to seek external support for monitoring and evaluation of a programme, additional costs may relate to deploying independent consultant companies providing such services.
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