Hamsatu Allamin, Founder and Executive Director of the Allamin Foundation for Peace and Development, Nigeria, recounting the myriad of Boko Haram’s atrocities and resulting devastation, particularly on women and girls, described the Foundation’s initiatives, including eight social networks for vulnerable groups of women, girls and youth under the “Jire Dole” network, which work with 29,000 registered participants. Investing in universal care services and well-paid, childcare-related leaves can, among other things, reduce gender inequalities at work and in the home, as well as help people who either provide or receive support live independent lives, he said. Jerome De Henau, Senior Lecturer in Economics in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at The Open University, United Kingdom, said the pandemic showed how much care work was relied upon to sustain economies while demonstrating how exposed, undervalued and gender-unequal care work was and remains. Pointing out that the COVID-19 pandemic led to a widening gap between men and women, thus exacerbating food insecurity, she advocated for strengthening the links between gender equality and women’s empowerment and food security and nutrition. Lauren Phillips, Deputy Director of the Inclusive Rural Transformation and Gender Equality Division of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, also underlined the need to collect up-to-date, reliable, sex-disaggregated data. Emphasizing that “data itself does not tell stories”, she underlined the importance of listening to the community and talking to key informants to understand the data. Describing the Centre’s work, she said that volunteers helped collect and interpret data and established a direct contact with communities. Introducing the five panellists and two discussants, he encouraged participants to make clear recommendations for key actions that can be taken to strengthen policies and recovery efforts that, in turn, empower women and girls most affected by emergencies.Īnnie Namala, Executive Director of the Centre for Social Equity and Inclusion, and National Convener of the Wada Na Todo Abhiyan campaign, said citizen-generated data brings together overlapping vulnerabilities to identify solutions. Progress on Sustainable Development Goal 5 will remain out of reach unless long-term structural barriers to gender equality are addressed and dismantled. Maris Burbergs (Latvia), Commission Chair-designate, in opening remarks, stressed: “The world is not on track to achieve gender equality by 2030”, highlighting how women and girls around the world are facing an unprecedented set of overlapping threats and challenges. On the leg-end of the bed, between the bars.Speakers underscored the importance of citizen-generated and gender-disaggregated data to tackle inequality, while others offered suggestions on closing gender gaps in care work, technology and geospatial services and nutrition, as the Commission on the Status of Women today held an interactive dialogue, “Getting back on track: Achieving gender equality in a context of overlapping emergencies”.Inside a block on the top shelf close to the window.On the wing of the toy plane hanged from the roof.Behind the seat of the blue chair (turn it over to see it).There are eight tokens that can be found in this level: Drag the key to the top of the car, and you will get a door key, which you will use to finish the tutorial. To find the key, you have to look under the pillow that is on the bed, then look on the table left of the door, then look at the blue car. To get to the door, you need to get the key. After that, they will start the level finding themselves in what seems to be a nursery. In the first part of the tutorial, players will be taught the movement keys and the interaction with objects in the game. The tutorial is the starting room of the game Escape Simulator.
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