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Gender (in)equality in law

Combating discrimination Completed
mazowieckie
Warszawa
2014-08-04 - 2016-02-04
245 797,00 PLN
221 205,00 PLN
law, national policies, women
Project description
Gender-based discrimination remains a huge issue in Poland. In 2013, over 1/4 of women experienced manifestations of discrimination because of gender, and 40% of all persons surveyed said that life in Poland is better for men than for women [CBOS BS/31/2013]. More and more organisations and activists unertake activities intended to level off chances of women and men. But the activities cannot be effective unless the existing legal frameworks in Poland include principles of equal treatment of both sexes. The Constitution of the Republic of Poland says that "women and men have in the Republic of Poland equal rights in family, political, social and economic life", and Poland signed the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, but legal provisions and legal notions can be encountered that have discriminatory nature.
The aim of the project was to identify legal loopholes leading to discrimination because of gender, in order to amend the deficient legal regulations.
As a result of the implementation of the project, the existing legal regulations were reviewed as to their conformity with the principle of equal treatment of women and men, and the knowledge on the problem of discriminating legal regulations was disseminated.
Under the project, the Green Book of (In)equality of sexes in law was prepared, describing 15 cases of regulations in the fields of healthcare, employment market and situation of LGBT persons. The publication indicates discriminatory legal notions and institutional addressees of the needed changes. Also the report "(In)equality of sexes in law - practical effects of impractical regulations?" was published, analysing social effects of discussed legal inequalities, as well as an expert opinion "Situation of women in the pension system". An important part of the project was to inform on the problem of legal inequalities through five lectures for law students in different cities, attended by over 100 persons, as well as a disseminating seminar for experts on the pension gap - the difference in pensions between women and men.
The project benefited 150 persons participating in the events concerning problems of gender-related discriminatory legal regulations.
We use the grant for capacity building