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Experts discuss how to incorporate gender aspects in transport planning in Guyana

Regional forum in Georgetown (Guyana) organized by the IDB brings together gender and transport experts from China, Mexico, Uruguay and Ecuador

The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) organized today the first forum on gender and transport in Georgetown (Guyana) with the objective of creating a space for the exchange of information between public policymakers, researchers and transport experts on how to incorporate the gender perspective into the transport sector to promote greater gender equality in Guyana.

This technical forum aims at making gender equality a sector priority by bringing evidence of the relevance it has for the sustainability of transport systems and sector institutions, and by presenting examples of transport systems in the region and around the world that are implementing interventions that seek to reduce gender gaps.

In the Caribbean and Latin America, more than 50 percent of public transport users are women. But for many years, transport has been seen as gender-neutral, assuming that its benefits are the same for everybody.

The reality is that mobility needs for men and women are different because their travel patterns are different. Women often travel accompanied with children or the elderly and they tend to make multiple stops in one single trip -known as trip-chaining- like from home to daycare, to work, to supermarket, and back home, and safety is one of their main concerns to move freely.

Even though women account for the majority of the systems ridership, most of Latin American and Caribbean transport systems are designed without taking explicitly these differences into account. Some literature has identified that limiting women’s mobility can have impacts on the well-being of their families and communities, as female absenteeism increases thus resulting on the loss of their jobs and their incomes.

This forum presented successful mechanisms and policies used in public and private sectors worldwide, as well as strategies and recommendations for their application in the transport and infrastructure sector to identify best practices applicable for the local context.

About the IDB

The Inter-American Development Bank works to improve lives. With a history dating back to 1959, the IDB is one of the leading sources of long-term financing for the economic, social and institutional development of Latin America and the Caribbean. The IDB also produces groundbreaking research and offers policy advice, technical assistance and capacity building to public and private sector clients throughout the region.

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