By By Elizabeth Dwoskin
WeNews correspondent
Saturday, May 27, 2006
(WOMENSENEWS)--
Impoverished girls in the Middle East are gaining more access to education.
Yemen announced it would rescind primary school fees for girls and the European Union said it would fund 200 new "girl friendly" schools for disadvantaged girls throughout Egypt, the United Nations Integrated Regional Information Networks reported in two stories published May 7 and May 15.
Yemen's fees for primary school have been low, but still prohibitive for over 1 million eligible girls.
Egypt's "girl-friendly" schools serve both sexes, but their curricula and administration are designed to encourage attendance by disadvantaged girls who are often burdened with household responsibilities.
Global Generations Policy Institute--
Baby Boomer Women: Secure Futures or Not?:
http://www.genpolicy.com/2006_journal/index_articles.html
Remove the Gag, Support Safe Abortion in Africa:
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1293/
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As baby boomer women age, their prospects for later-in-life security become increasingly dim, reported a study released May 24 by the Harvard Generations Policy Program and the Global Generations Policy Institute, both based in Boston.
The authors emphasized that this cohort of women may end up worse off than their predecessors. Baby boomer women spend more, acquire more debt and are less likely to have traditional pensions, spousal benefits, or retiree health coverage than the previous generation of women, the study found. It also said policy makers have long ignored the needs of women approaching retirement with insufficient resources.
"Baby boomer women are in trouble," writes Paul Hodge, director of the Harvard Generations Policy Program. "Unlike any other time in our nation's history, unless there are dramatic policy shifts, baby boomer women, most particularly minority women, will find their elder years to be a 'never ending' struggle. After selflessly caring for their children and aging parents, a significant number of our country's 40 million plus boomer women will not be able to afford to retire, will fall below the poverty line and experience financial insecurity and poorer health in their later years with limited aid from traditional safety nets."
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