Women’s Empowerment Without Power: Strategic v. Practical Interests in SDGs and the Voluntary National Reviews

Women’s Empowerment Without Power: Strategic v. Practical Interests in SDGs and the Voluntary National Reviews

This study examines country's voluntary national reviews (VNRs) to assess global commitment to gender equality in the era of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). While the SDGs promise realisation of gender equality, progress data indicate that gender equality will not be achieved in the next century, let alone by the SDGs target date of 2030. This study posits two explanations for slow progress on gender equality: (i) countries selectively pursue gender equality, as evidenced by our finding that country VNRs demonstrated commitment to achieving only 31% of extant gender equality gaps;and (ii) countries are more committed to achieving gender equality on ‘practical’ dimensions (i.e., relating to basic needs, such as maternal health and education) than ‘strategic’ dimensions which seek to challenge unequal power relations and women's subordinate position within society (e.g., income, land, political power). Whether via refinements to the SDG/VNR process, or through well-established gender platforms such as the World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Index and Equal Measures 2030 SDG Gender Index, gender equality advocates must push for pursuit of the entirety of the holistic gender equality agenda as hard-fought for and agreed by the seminal Beijing Platform for Action. Without greater attention to strategic dimensions, women will be stuck in a vicious cycle of ‘empowerment without power’ and gender equality will elude women for yet another century.

Policy Implications

  • Feminists were right to worry about the dilution of gender equality – and particularly the more political and strategic dimensions of gender equality – within the holistic but voluntary SDG agenda.
  • The eponymously ‘voluntary’ VNR framework excludes and/or insufficiently addresses several key gender equality dimensions, including media, health, conflict, environment, legal framework, and institutions.
  • This study thus calls for a feminist revival of a more political and less technocratic conception of women's empowerment and gender equality. Whether via much-needed refinements to the SDG / VNR process (e.g., more robust and standardised SDG / VNR reporting process) or through separate efforts, gender equality advocates must push for conceptualisation and pursuit of the entirety of the holistic gender equality agenda so that that no aspect of the indivisible gender equality agenda is overlooked.