Wouldn t Say Such A Stupid Thing: Imran Khan Backtracks On His Rape Remarks ndtv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ndtv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Empowering women
July 26, 2021
Gender equality is considered a vital factor in determining the overall wellbeing and growth of a nation, country and a society.
Gender equality is when people of all genders have equal rights, responsibilities and opportunities. The Sustainable Development Goal No 5 talks about achieving “gender equality and empowering all women and girls”.
In addition to SDG 5, there are gender-related targets in other goals pertaining to health, education, water and sanitation, cities and human settlements, climate change, economic growth, peaceful and inclusive societies as well as ending hunger and poverty. It is important to take steps to ensure gender equality and women empowerment. A McKinsey research series on ‘Women Matter’ has found that representation of women in public as well as private sector organizations improves performance due to such diversity challenging conventional thinking and leading to more dynamic discussion and better decision-m
Gender, Countering Violent Extremism and Women, Peace and Security in Kenya gov.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gov.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
How parents view the challenges of childcare globally
BUSINESS
Shot of a mother bonding with her baby boy at home.[Getty Images]
Becoming a parent is a monumental life change no matter where you are in the world.
But where you are in the world does play a part when it comes to how you perceive the challenges of the first 12 months of raising a child.
That is according to Nestlé’s “Parenting Index,” which looks at how mothers and fathers in 16 countries view the ease of being a parent.
Nestlé surveyed more than 8,000 mothers and fathers of babies aged 0-12 months from January 14 to February 27 2020.
Being a woman in Pakistan
July 25, 2021
Being a columnist in Pakistan is frequently akin to being a pallbearer. You get to participate in the burial of your dreams of a peaceful and happy social order. And this funereal exercise has its familiar rituals. A surge of grief and lamentation, laced with candlelight vigils, is followed by a sense of resignation. You return to that uneasy calm that constantly throbs with the threat of another outburst.
This is how the brutal, barbaric murder – I read the word ‘slaughter’ in one report – of Noor Mukadam in Islamabad on Tuesday is expected to gradually fade out from the flaming headlines where it is presently lodged. This is what we have learnt from similar or even more traumatising episodes in the past.