This report explores a range of factors that underpin the digital gender divide, bolsters the evidence base for policy making and provides policy directions for consideration by all G20 governments. It has been prepared by the OECD at the request of the Australian Government to support advancement of the 2017 G20 Roadmap for Digitalisation: Policies for a Digital Future, in particular its aim to support the equitable participation of women in the digital economy. It complements the initiative of the 2018 Argentinian G20 Presidency to share policies, actions and national practices that have had a significant and measurable impact in bridging the digital gender divide, while supporting Argentina’s mainstreaming of gender across the G20 agenda. The report finds that hurdles to access, affordability, lack of education as well as inherent biases and sociocultural norms curtail women and girls’ ability to benefit from the opportunities offered by the digital transformation. In addition, girls’ relatively lower educational enrolment in disciplines that would allow them to perform well in a digital world – such as science, technology, engineering and mathematics, as well as information and communication technologies – coupled with women’s and girls’ more limited use of digital tools could lead to widening gaps and greater inequality.
%0 Report
%1 oecd2018bridging
%A Borgonovi, Francesca
%A Centurelli, Raffaella
%A Dernis, Hélène
%A Grundke, Robert
%A Horvát, Peter
%A Jamet, Stéphanie
%A Keese, Mark
%A Liebender, Anna-Sophie
%A Marcolin, Luca
%A Rosenfeld, David
%A Squicciarini, Mariagrazia
%C Paris
%D 2018
%K digitalisation gender_discrimination gender_equality
%T Bridging the digital gender divide. Include, upskill, innovate
%U https://www.oecd.org/going-digital/bridging-the-digital-gender-divide.pdf
%X This report explores a range of factors that underpin the digital gender divide, bolsters the evidence base for policy making and provides policy directions for consideration by all G20 governments. It has been prepared by the OECD at the request of the Australian Government to support advancement of the 2017 G20 Roadmap for Digitalisation: Policies for a Digital Future, in particular its aim to support the equitable participation of women in the digital economy. It complements the initiative of the 2018 Argentinian G20 Presidency to share policies, actions and national practices that have had a significant and measurable impact in bridging the digital gender divide, while supporting Argentina’s mainstreaming of gender across the G20 agenda. The report finds that hurdles to access, affordability, lack of education as well as inherent biases and sociocultural norms curtail women and girls’ ability to benefit from the opportunities offered by the digital transformation. In addition, girls’ relatively lower educational enrolment in disciplines that would allow them to perform well in a digital world – such as science, technology, engineering and mathematics, as well as information and communication technologies – coupled with women’s and girls’ more limited use of digital tools could lead to widening gaps and greater inequality.
@techreport{oecd2018bridging,
abstract = {This report explores a range of factors that underpin the digital gender divide, bolsters the evidence base for policy making and provides policy directions for consideration by all G20 governments. It has been prepared by the OECD at the request of the Australian Government to support advancement of the 2017 G20 Roadmap for Digitalisation: Policies for a Digital Future, in particular its aim to support the equitable participation of women in the digital economy. It complements the initiative of the 2018 Argentinian G20 Presidency to share policies, actions and national practices that have had a significant and measurable impact in bridging the digital gender divide, while supporting Argentina’s mainstreaming of gender across the G20 agenda. The report finds that hurdles to access, affordability, lack of education as well as inherent biases and sociocultural norms curtail women and girls’ ability to benefit from the opportunities offered by the digital transformation. In addition, girls’ relatively lower educational enrolment in disciplines that would allow them to perform well in a digital world – such as science, technology, engineering and mathematics, as well as information and communication technologies – coupled with women’s and girls’ more limited use of digital tools could lead to widening gaps and greater inequality.},
added-at = {2019-09-24T11:08:54.000+0200},
address = {Paris},
author = {Borgonovi, Francesca and Centurelli, Raffaella and Dernis, Hélène and Grundke, Robert and Horvát, Peter and Jamet, Stéphanie and Keese, Mark and Liebender, Anna-Sophie and Marcolin, Luca and Rosenfeld, David and Squicciarini, Mariagrazia},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b4b68caf356ab936c7c35e8f0953a46c/meneteqel},
institution = {Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)},
interhash = {0388201d373a96afbad576acefb661d1},
intrahash = {b4b68caf356ab936c7c35e8f0953a46c},
keywords = {digitalisation gender_discrimination gender_equality},
language = {eng},
timestamp = {2019-09-24T11:09:15.000+0200},
title = {Bridging the digital gender divide. Include, upskill, innovate},
type = {Report},
url = {https://www.oecd.org/going-digital/bridging-the-digital-gender-divide.pdf},
year = 2018
}