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Strategy

Vision

In his oath of office, the Secretary-General made clear that achieving gender parity was a top priority:

Management reform must ensure we reach gender parity sooner rather than later. The initial target for the equal representation of women and men among United Nations staff was the year 2000. Sixteen years later, we are far from that goal. I pledge to respect gender parity from the start in all my appointments to the Senior Management Group and the Chief Executives Board.

By the end of my mandate, we should reach full gender parity at the Under-Secretary-General and Assistant Secretary-General levels, including special representatives and special envoys. We need a clear road map with benchmarks and time frames to achieve parity across the system, well before the target year of 2030.

This objective not only reflects the Organization’s core values and a commitment that is decades old, but is essential to strengthening the work of the UN. The system-wide strategy on gender parity is a milestone in this journey. It operationalizes the goal of gender parity, moving the UN from ambition to action.

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Gender Parity Task Force

In January 2017, a Gender Parity Task Force was established to come up with a clear roadmap, with benchmarks and timeframes, to achieve parity across the system. The Task Force, consisting of staff from more than 30 entities, divided into subgroups focusing on:

  • Data / setting targets / establishing common definitions of what is being measured / accountability
  • Special measures
  • Senior Appointments
  • Mission Settings
  • Enabling environment / organizational culture / policies related to work environment

Each group consisted of a lead and members from entities across the UN system. The result of their eight-month effort is a collaborative, inclusive product, developed by the system and for the system, which incorporates good practices from those making strides, and lessons learned from past efforts.

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Strategy Information

The System-wide Strategy on Gender Parity balances accountability with incentives, recognises different starting points and challenges, and provides positive tools to empower and encourage staff and managers alike. It includes three target dates addressing international staff,ÌýFS, P-1 to USG levels, on Permanent/Continuing and Fixed-term appointments: 2021, 2026 and 2028. To ensure parity by these dates, annual targets should be set for each entity/level combination based on the gap to parity. The goal, however, is not just about hitting the numbers. It is about modernizing the organization and shifting its institutional culture so that the United Nations can access and capitalize on its full potential.

The strategy advises on reinvigorating recruitment and retention efforts, including by proposing temporary special measure to assist and support managers as well as by suggesting the use of modern executive search functions and senior talent inventories. Priority is given to developing staff talent through mentoring opportunities, training programmes, talent management pilot initiatives, and the use of induction processes. The strategy aims to strengthen the organization’s working environment by proposing programmes on eliminating unconscious bias, flexible work arrangements, revised parental leave policies, and improved workplace and accommodation standards in non-family duty stations.

The commitment to achieving system-wide gender parity is underpinned by a strong legislative and institutional framework which has been consistently developed and strengthened since the founding of the United Nations in 1945. Ultimately, the strategy operationalizes this legal framework, taking the imperative of gender parity from ambition to action.

The System-wide Strategy on Gender Parity is available inÌýEnglish, Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, andÌýSpanish.Ìý

Strategy Report