Presentation of the Jean Monnet Erasmus+ project ReGEM
Centre Maurice Halbwachs, 48 Bd. Jourdan, salle R2-02, Paris, ou en visio (inscription ci-dessous) Please add your e-mail in «Comments»
INSCRIPTION : Cette séance est programmée dans le cadre du séminaire de Serge Paugam sur L’attachement social. Principes de la solidarité humaine. Pour celles et ceux qui n’y participent pas habituellement, merci de bien vouloir vous inscrire à partir du lien ci-dessous :
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March 25, 2022, 9h-12h
9.00 Welcome to Participants and Introduction
9.15 to 10:45 Presentations of the ReGEM Project
Serge Paugam (EHESS/Centre Maurice Halbwachs Paris)
Christian Suter (Université de Neuchâtel): Mesurer l’égalité de genre: un aperçu
Enrico di Bella (University of Genoa): Mapping regional gender disparities in France and Italy
Sandra Fachelli (Pablo de Olavide University of Sevilla) and Pedro López-Roldán (Autonomous University of Barcelona): Building the regional gender equality measure in Spain
Fabrizio Culotta (University of Genoa): Gender responsive fiscal policies: the labour market
11.00 to 12:00 Discussion
Emmanuel Didier, Etienne Penissat
Project Summary
Gender equality is a topic of increasing relevance in the EU and worldwide, but its measurement is mainly limited to national levels. During the past years, various experiences tried to exploit gender equality at a subnational (regional) level, but they remained country-specific and limited to specific domains. The ongoing Jean Monnet Regional Gender Equality Measurement in the EU (ReGEM) project aims at providing a regional mapping of the most comprehensive gender equality indicator in Europe, the Gender Equality Index (GEI) of the European Institute on Gender Equality (EIGE). This measure covers 14 sub-domains and is available for all 27 Member States of the EU and the UK. The ReGEM project will assess the data availability at the NUTS2 (regional) level and the feasibility of constructing a Regional Gender Equality Index (R-GEI), identifying a consistent system of indicators which can be used as a common basis for gender equality measurements at regional level in Europe. The project will provide a preliminary analysis of the structure and evolution of regional gender (in)equality by comparing four major EU countries (Italy, France, Spain and Germany), covering a total of 98 regions.