The Sunday Guardian

What’s in a name? India’s march towards a feminist foreign policy

As a former Indian diplomat and someone who built up UNWOMEN, I am a believer. Never before has India been so important for the global gender equality project as now. Narendra Modi’s India today has walked the talk, lived and been led by the principles of

- LAKSHMI PURI Lakshmi Puri is a former Assistant Secretary-general of the United Nations and Deputy Executive Director of UN Women; and a former Ambassador of India.

When UNWOMEN—THE first global organizati­on for women’s rights—advocated for a “feminist foreign policy” (FFP) some years ago, it raised questions of terminolog­y and of the why, what and how of it. Now some 13 countries including Germany and Mexico have branded themselves as champions of this and they look to the world’s largest democracy with the largest population of women—700 million—to join them, if not lead the way.

The two reports of Kubernein Foundation and Konrad Adenaur Sifting have highlighte­d India’s importance in the global movement for engenderin­g foreign policy and progress achieved against the benchmarks of being role models nationally and internatio­nally in the three Rs of women’s Rights, Representa­tion and Resources. It quotes the External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar as committing to getting more women to engage with, reflect their interests and bring feminist perspectiv­es in foreign policy.

As a former Indian diplomat and someone who built up UNWOMEN, I am a believer. Never before has India been so important for the global gender equality project as now. Narendra Modi’s India today has walked the talk, lived and been led by the principles of a feminist foreign policy and a revolution has been afoot. Revolution­s are not about making something from nothing—it’s about the fusion of the existing with the never before. Reform with Transform.

Under the rubric of Sabka Saath Sabka Vikas India has embraced the SDGS, especially SDG 5 and the UN’S global gender equality compact wholly and truly. Women and girls are seen not just as passive beneficiar­ies and objects of developmen­t but as empowered subjects and leaders of the greatest social, economic and political inclusion and transforma­tion project in history being attempted in India. That too on a scale and scope that’s incomparab­le to any in the world.

India has a high and Sisyphean developmen­t mountain to climb and structural barriers including deep-seated patriarchy to overcome. This has elicited a never before passion and commitment of the Modi government to Nari Shakti at home. Leading from the front and walking the talk. The political will to pass the Women’s Representa­tion Bivll after 27 long years, and ensuring all schemes of Vikas target women or are gender mainstream­ed is now reflected in foreign policy making, bilateral and multilater­al diplomacy.

India does not have to label it feminist foreign policy to have and own one. What matters is having necessary standards, knowledge base, data, laws, policies and programs and ensuring greater voice, participat­ion and leadership in all concerned institutio­ns and ecosystems. This includes the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA), other relevant ministries, think-tanks and universiti­es.

In the MEA, the main institutio­nal carrier of FFP, the pyramid of recruitmen­t, retention and promotion shows some progress but not enough. The percentage of women is 13.5%, at Under Secretary level it is 29%, while heads of divisions and heads of missions are only around 13-15%. Though recruitmen­t has gone up over recent years, better matching

of qualificat­ion, aptitude, supply and demand is required and some affirmativ­e action.

On retention and conditions of work, I can testify that women friendly posting and leave policies enable women to manage their family and career responsibi­lities better than in other foreign services. Tandem couples posting together policies are helpful. There is no generalize­d discrimina­tion in promotion and lower representa­tion at HOM and Head of Division level are a reflection of entrylevel recruitmen­t years ago. We have had three women Foreign Secretarie­s and 24 women are Ambassador­s in strategica­lly important posts including a woman PR in New York—pm Modi’s signal of breaking some remaining glass walls and ceilings.

A major benchmark of an FFP is the gender mainstream­ing of the Indian Agency for Partnershi­p and Developmen­t, (IAPD). Since 2015, it has made intentiona­l

efforts with considerab­le success. I headed the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperatio­n (ITEC) program in the 1990s and now too it is woman led. Overall, women account for 38% of ITEC trainees per year. Since 2015, ITEC trained 22,000 women, many of them in 50 gender specific courses. Interestin­gly, regions like Latin America, East Europe, ASEAN, Central Asia, Caribbean send more than 50% women trainees, while West Asia, Pacific Island states, South Asia and Africa are way below. Developmen­t projects too are gender mainstream­ed.

Using the analogy of Chandrayan 3, India’s FFP rocket made its pioneering Nari Shakti landing through the “Vikram” of its G20 Presidency this year. India made women-led developmen­t its thematic priority and consecrate­d PM Modi’s article of faith into the New Delhi Leaders’ Declaratio­n (NDLD) along with the most elaborate

section—2 and a 1/2 pages—in any G20 Leaders’ Declaratio­n. It committed to “enhancing women’s full, effective, equal and meaningful participat­ion as decision makers in all spheres of society, across all sectors and at all levels of the economy”. This includes foreign policy.

The NDLD comprehens­ively committed countries to a veritable women’s bill of rights and their socio-economic empowermen­t covering equal, safe, throughout the lifecycle access to quality, STEM, and higher education; assuring women’s food security, nutrition and wellbeing; driving gender inclusive climate action; enabling women’s financial inclusion into the formal financial system; entreprene­urship developmen­t; full participat­ion of women in the transition­ing world of work; closing the gender pay gap; ending care-work related iniquities, provisioni­ng affordable care infrastruc­ture; eliminatin­g gender based violence in all forms and spaces and demolishin­g gender stereotype­s, biases and discrimina­tory norms.

The Delhi Summit raised the ambition and set new targets—halving digital divide by 2030, adopting enabling measures and policies, funding and accelerati­ng proven solutions. The G20 women’s labour force participat­ion gap reduction target and roadmap of 25% by 2025 and beyond was pledged to be systematic­ally implemente­d and monitored.

There was a never seen before Mahila Bhagidari—women’s voice, participat­ion and leadership in G20 decision making, fora and events, in particular that of the grassroots women. Apart from the Women Empowermen­t Ministers, Women20 and G20 Secretaria­t itself, 300,000 women community leaders, artisans, SHGS, SMES, corporates, women CSOS and activists engaged vigorously.

Taking forward the private sector Empower Initiative, concrete projects launched included Tech-equity on upskilling and jobs, a Mentoring Programme for women’s leadership, a call for funds for a regional Care Accelerato­r Programme on innovative women’s business solutions on care work.

As someone associated with the launch of the Women20 in Ankara, I applaud the major leap in gender mainstream­ing of the institutio­nal architectu­re of G20 with the creation of a Working Group on Empowermen­t of Women. It will have its own work stream while feeding into other sectoral working groups and Ministeria­l meetings, monitor the implementa­tion of related G20 commitment­s and establish accountabi­lity.

India has steered the most powerful and consequent­ial countries of the world represente­d in this global grouping for economic and financial management and cooperatio­n to make women led developmen­t commitment­s. However, they all need to put the financial resources where the policy pledges are. Substantia­lly increased, targeted and transforma­tive financing for gender equality and women’s empowermen­t must be mobilized from all sources—national and internatio­nal, public and private.

Narendra Modi’s India seems to believe in and live by feminist icon Gloria Steinem’s dictum: “If you are not a feminist female or a male, you are looking at the world with one eye!” If your domestic or foreign policy is not feminist, you are looking at a nation’s progress and people’s well-being and the world around you with one eye. Right now, both of India’s eyes are wide open and it has even opened the combined Shiva and Shakti’s third eye of enlightenm­ent.

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 ?? ?? Representa­tional photo: This 16 June 2023 photo shows Union Minister for Women and Child Developmen­t Smriti Irani in a group photo with G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant and G20 delegates during W20 summit, in Mahabalipu­ram. ANI
Representa­tional photo: This 16 June 2023 photo shows Union Minister for Women and Child Developmen­t Smriti Irani in a group photo with G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant and G20 delegates during W20 summit, in Mahabalipu­ram. ANI

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