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                                                                                 4th Quarter 2010
              Womenable E3 News
In This Issue
Most Womenabling Research of 2010
Most Womenabling News/Events of the Year
2010's Most Womenabling Research

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In tandem with our list of the top ten womenabling news and events of the year, we thought we'd share our list of the most noteworthy womenabling research reports of 2010. Here they are, listed in alphabetical order. There are 11 rather than 10, but we couldn't decide which one to take out. And we might even have had 12 if we'd only seen a GEM women's entrepreneurship report this year ...

"Evaluating women entrepreneurs in the informal sector: marginalisation dynamics or rational economic choice?", Williams/Gurtoo, ICSB-IJGE-NWBC 2010 Awardee for Best Paper in Women's Entrepreneurship

The Global Gender Gap Report, 2010, World Economic Forum

Hidden Social Enterprises, Delta Economics

High Performance Entrepreneurs: Women in High Tech, Illuminate Ventures

Power, Voice and Rights: A Turning Point for Gender Equality in Asia and the Pacific, UNDP

Prioritizing the Value of Technology to America's Small Business Owners: Assessing the Importance of Software, Company Websites, and Social Media, Guardian Life Small Business Research Institute

The Roadmap to 2020: Fueling the Growth of Women's Enterprise Development, Quantum Leaps

Women and Mobile: A Global Opportunity, Cherie Blair Foundation, GSMA Dev't Fund, Vital Wave Consulting

Women, Business and the Law 2010,  World Bank

Women's Economic Opportunity Index, Economist Intelligence Unit

The World's Women, 2010: Trends and Statistics, UN

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Womenable's Top Ten List of 2010
The most noteworthy news/events of the year

Top TenIn a departure from our usual e-newsletter highlighting the latest womenabling news and providing womenablers everywhere with insights to educate, enlighten and empower your efforts, we thought we'd end the year by compiling what we feel are the most interesting and relevant activities that have taken place in the field of women's enterprise development in 2010. Here - in no particular order - are what we see as the ten most noteworthy trends and events of the year:
  1. The establishment of UN Women: It's been talked about and touted for a number of years, and this year it finally happened: the merging of heretofore disparate UN activities for and about women into one "superagency" for women: the "UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women,"  otherwise known as UN Women. This entity will oversee efforts formerly under the purview of the UN's Division for the Advancement of Women (DAW), International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (INSTRAW), Office of the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and the Advancement of Women (OSAGI), and the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM). Heading the new combined entity is former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet. What do you need to know about the new agency and how you can engage with it? Read this.
     
  2. Expansion of women's empowerment measurements: Where does women's economic empowerment stand? Some of the most well-known measurements of women's empowerment include the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap reports, the UN's GDI and GEM measurements, and the OECD's Gender, Institutions and Development Data Base. However, all of these include several other measures (including health, education and political participation) as well as economic empowerment and, with respect to the latter, focus on women as workers rather than business owners. There are the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor's reports on women and entrepreneurship but, sadly, one has not been published since 2007. This year, though, saw the addition of two new kids on the block, and both of these indicators focus entirely on economic empowerment, and specifically on entrepreneurship. They are the Economist Intelligence Unit's Women's Economic Opportunity Index, and a new GenderCLIR methodology for BEE assessment from USAID/Booz Allen Hamilton.
     
  3. A picture's worth a thousand words: The International Museum of Women launched a powerful online exhibition this year, Economica: Women and the Global Economy. One project within the exhibition is Picturing Power & Potential, a juried photo exhibit which proves the adage and is well worth a look. Bookmark and return to the site as they add to it in the coming year.
     
  4. Recognition of "The Female Factor" in some media circles, but ...: The International Herald Tribune has written a number of compelling articles about women's empowerment issues this year as a part of their series, "The Female Factor." And Canada's Globe and Mail launched a national conversation about Women in Power during Women's History Month in Canada (October). Despite this nice coverage, however, a recent study, Who Makes the News? The Global Media Monitoring Report 2010, finds that women's voices and stories - especially about economic issues - are still largely untold in the news media.
     
  5. Second interval review for MDGs: In 2000, at the United Nations Millennium Summit, 189 world leaders planted an ambitious flag in the ground, agreeing on eight Millennium Development Goals aimed at eliminating world poverty by 2015. (Our favorite: #3, gender equity.) A "second interval" review of the progress being made on meeting those goals was held this year, including the publication of an MDG report and the convening of an MDG summit. The bottom line? Progress is indeed being made, but in many cases is uneven, affecting some populations and not others. Here's a report card showing some of the details. While this review shows that much remains to be done to meet the 2015 deadline, "It is not in the stars to hold our destiny, but in ourselves." (William Shakespeare)
     
  6. Progress stalled for WED in UK: Last year, in our year-end top trends E-newsletter, we noted the implosion of Prowess - the UK's key advocacy organization for women's economic empowerment. Well, things have gone from bad to worse in the UK for women's enterprise development with the election of a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition government. As feared/expected, one of the new government's first acts was declaring that Business Link and Regional Development Agencies would be phased out, in favor of Local Enterprise Partnerships. It remains to be seen how this will impact focused/tailored business support services such as the women's business centre pilot programme, but our guess is that it won't be positive.
     
  7. A new ED and Chair for NWBC: Another issue we followed with interest last year (though it did not make our top ten list) was stalled activity at the National Women's Business Council in the wake of the 2008 US presidential election. Well, things are starting to move once again, with the hiring of a new executive director, Dana Lewis, and the appointment of a new chair, Donna James. Filling Council seats and revving up Council activities should commence in 2011. Women's business advocates in the US are relieved.
     
  8. Quinquennial census of women-owned firms in the US: Say what you will about the growing hegemony of political and economic power worldwide, the United States still rocks when it comes to measuring the number and economic power of women-owned businesses. The 2007 quinquennial economic census of women-owned firms was published this year. Womenable summarizes the key trends for you in this blogpost.
     
  9. Progress in procurement: Doing business with the US government is getting easier for women-owned businesses. Finally, after a ten-year wait, a women-owned business procurement program is finally going to be launched by the SBA early next year. Not content to wait for this to happen, late in 2008 Women Impacting Public Policy, with the support of American Express OPEN, launched a "Give Me 5%" initiative (which refers to the gov't-wide spending goal for women-owned firms) to educate women business owners on how to do business with the federal government. Where do things stand with respect to meeting that 5% goal? Federal spending with women-owned firms stands at 3.7% as of FY2009, up from 2.4% a decade earlier but still well short of the goal.
     
  10. Making market connections: There are two new initiatives poised to help women business owners globally make significant market connections with another important customer: large corporations. First is WEConnect International, an organization that was founded in 2009 but started to get its sea legs this year with the launch of WEConnect Europe and an event in London this October. WEConnect's goal is to make it easier for large corporations to find women-owned business suppliers and for women-owned firms to learn how to do business with large corporations. And speaking of large corporations, one of them - Coca-Cola (ranked 404 on Fortune's Global 500 largest companies) - announced a "reach for the stars" goal at this year's Clinton Global Initiative conference. Coke's "5 by 20" project aims to draw 5 million women into its Micro Distribution Center program in Africa and elsewhere by the year 2020.
     
Happy holidays and best wishes for a womenabling 2011!

Sincerely,
Julie R. Weeks
Womenable