View all text of Part I [§ 2151 - § 2152k]

§ 2151–2. Actions to improve the international gender policy of the United States Agency for International Development
(a) Gender analysis definedIn this section, the term “gender analysis”—
(1) means a socioeconomic analysis of available or gathered quantitative and qualitative information to identify, understand, and explain gaps between men and women which typically involves examining—
(A) differences in the status of women and men and their differential access to and control over assets, resources, education, opportunities, and services;
(B) the influence of gender roles, structural barriers, and norms on the division of time between paid employment, unpaid work (including the subsistence production and care for family members), and volunteer activities;
(C) the influence of gender roles, structural barriers, and norms on leadership roles and decision making; constraints, opportunities, and entry points for narrowing gender gaps and empowering women; and
(D) potential differential impacts of development policies and programs on men and women, including unintended or negative consequences; and
(2) includes conclusions and recommendations to enable development policies and programs to narrow gender gaps and improve the lives of women and girls.
(b) International development cooperation policyIt shall be the international development cooperation policy of the United States—
(1) to reduce gender disparities with respect to economic, social, political, educational, and cultural resources, wealth, opportunities, and services;
(2) to strive to eliminate gender-based violence and mitigate its harmful effects on individuals and communities including through efforts to develop standards and capacity to reduce gender-based violence in the workplace and other places where women work;
(3) to support activities that secure private property rights and land tenure for women in developing countries, including—
(A) legal frameworks that give women equal rights to own, register, use, profit from, and inherit land and property;
(B) improving legal literacy to enable women to exercise the rights described in subparagraph (A); and
(C) improving the capacity of law enforcement and community leaders to enforce such rights;
(4) to increase the capability of women and girls to fully exercise their rights, determine their life outcomes, assume leadership roles, and influence decision-making in households, communities, and societies; and
(5) to improve the access of women and girls to education, particularly higher education opportunities in business, finance, and management, in order to enhance financial literacy and business development, management, and strategy skills.
(c) ActionsIn order to advance the policy described in subsection (b), the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development shall ensure that—
(1) strategies, projects, and activities of the Agency are shaped by a gender analysis;
(2) standard indicators are used to assess such strategies, projects, and activities, if applicable; and
(3) gender equality and female empowerment are integrated throughout the Agency’s program cycle and related processes for purposes of strategic planning, project design and implementation, monitoring, and evaluation.
(Pub. L. 115–428, § 3, Jan. 9, 2019, 132 Stat. 5511.)