The indicators below relate to five dimensions of gender equality — economic structures and access to resources; education; health and related services; public life and decision-making; and human rights of women and girl children. The data on these indicators come from the World Development Indicators and additional sources.
Some highlights:
See whether laws and institutions formally treat women (unmarried and married) differently than men in accessing institutions, using property, getting a job, providing incentives to work, and going to court (available under economic structures and public life of women), using data from the Women, Business, and the Law Database.
Explore health indicators, such as use of antenatal care, by wealth quintile, from Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS).
Use data on women's level of acceptance of violence, available from Demographic and Health Surveys.
The indicators below relate to five dimensions of gender equality — economic structures and access to resources; education; health and related services; public life and decision-making; and human rights of women and girl children. The data on these indicators come from the World Development Indicators and additional sources.Some highlights: See whether laws and institutions formally treat women (unmarried and married) differently than men in accessing institutions, using property, getting a job, providing incentives to work, and going to court (available under economic structures and public life of women), using data from the Women, Business, and the Law Database. Explore health indicators, such as use of antenatal care, by wealth quintile, from Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS). Use data on women's level of acceptance of violence, available from Demographic and Health Surveys.
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