The three main issues, the three broad...
As you work through the steps, this is going to guide how you use the questions in your reference guide on the shower sheet--and Hélène has explained why I called it that.
What you want to keep in mind is—and this is the big picture; you're working on something like a budget--the key GBA questions to ask about the development or implementation of the measure you're looking at. Where would you find the answers? A lot of times it's where would you get the data and how would you find the information you're looking for? And finally, what would be the gender implications on the development or implementation of the measure, depending on the information and the answers you find?
So keeping in mind that's your big framework, we're going to start with step one. If you look on your shower sheet, step one is the preliminary assessment of the gender equality impacts. Basically it's like an environmental scan of the issue, but from a gender perspective. You always have an environmental scan that shows you everything, but not the particularities of the gender dimensions.
I would propose we have five minutes, because this is a condensed two-hour training. For the five minutes of work on the two questions in step one on your shower sheet, how can the issue be clearly defined? As you look at your case study, what is really the issue at hand of your case study from a gender perspective?
In the shower sheet, in Step 1: Preliminary Assessment of Gender Equality Impacts, the second question is as follows: “How can the issue be clearly defined? The second question in Step 1 is:
What are the root causes of this issue?
“What are the root causes of this issue?”
So for your case study, look at those two questions.
Oui?