Gender inequality index (GII)
Variable Definition
This measure was adapted from the Gender Inequality Index developed by the United Nations Development Fund (UNDP), which uses country-level data to characterize three dimensions: health (maternal mortality and adolescent birth rates), empowerment (education and government), and the labor market (labor force participation). This index is a measure of the loss in potential human development due to inequality between women and men in these three dimensions. It ranges from 0, indicating a context where women and men fare equally, to 1, indicating a context in which one gender fares poorly compared to the other in all measured dimensions. For SALURBAL cities, we adapted the index to capture gender-based disadvantage and created 2 versions, one including the three dimensions and the other one including only two dimensions: empowerment and the labor market. This is the verion using all three dimentions. It was constructed using city level data from vital registrations and population projections, census: % female and male labor force participation, % female and male population 25+ with at least high school education, and the % women and men in mayoral positions in the government for the period of 2010-2015 obtained from different sources for each country. To construct the index, we followed the formulas described by UNDP.
Variable Information
- Variable Name
- CNSGIIV1
- Observation Type
- area-level
- Value Type
- double
- Domain
- Social, Economic, and Services Environment
- Subdomain
- Gender Equity
Coverage
- Years Available
- 2014-2016
- Countries
- Argentina, Brasil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama
- Geographic Levels
- L1AD
- Public Access
- ✓ Available
Data Availability by Country and Year
| Year | AR | BR | CL | CO | CR | GT | MX | PA | SV | PE | NI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014-2016 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | . | . |
Data Sources
Data Access Information
SALURBAL respects the Data Use Agreements of our data sources. Some data is not publicly available.
To request access to non-public data or for more information about our data, please contact salurbal.data@drexel.edu.