Jordan

In-Country Activities
- Citizenship Campaign
- eCourse
- Institute and Training of Trainers
- IT Center
- Leadership Workshops
- Curriculum development in Arabic

Our Partner

Sisterhood Is Global Institute/Jordan (SIGI/J)Sisterhood Is Global Institute/Jordan (SIGI/J) is a non-governmental, non-profit organization established in 1998. Its founders include lawyers, jurists and human rights activists working to support and promote women's rights through education, skills training and modern technology. Its programs include the Human Rights Education Program based on the Arabic version of the training manual Claiming our Rights; the Combating Violence against Women and Girls Program based on the Arabic version of the training manual Safe and Secure; the Knowledge Partnership Program which provides ICT training; and the Cultural Events Program which highlights the experiences of women leaders.

Women's Status at a Glance

Country Overview

Government type: Constitutional monarchy
Total population: 5.4 million
Population under age 15: 38%
GDP per Capita: $4,700 (purchasing power parity)
Life expectancy: 71.2 years
Ethnic groups: Arab 98%, Circassian 1%, Armenian 1%
Religions: Sunni Muslim 92%, Christian 6% (majority Greek Orthodox, but some Greek and Roman Catholics, Syrian Orthodox, Coptic Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox, and Protestant denominations), other 2% (several small Shi'a Muslim and Druze populations)
Internet users: 81 per 1,000 people

Education and Health

Adult literacy rate
Female rate: 84.7%
Male rate: 95.1%
Maternal mortality rate: 41 per 100,000 live births
Total fertility rate: 3.5 births per woman

Political Participation

Year women received right to
Vote: 1974
Stand for election: 1974
Seats in parliament held by women
Lower house: 5.5%
Upper house: 12.7%
Women in govt. at ministerial level: 10.7%
Quotas: Election law quota for national parliament (6 seats (5.45%) for women in the national parliament)

Stories and Reports

Jordan: Women seek equal rights under Citizenship Law

By Rana Husseini
28 December 2007
The Jordan Times

AMMAN - Um Omar is a Jordanian who married a Syrian construction worker 16 years ago, but four years ago, he left without notice and no one knows his whereabouts.

The 45-year-old mother of nine tried to seek government help since her children are not Jordanian citizens and cannot benefit from many privileges, but was shocked to learn that they do not support non-Jordanian offspring.

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Photo Blog of National ICT Training of Trainers Institute in Jordan

Women's Learning Partnership (WLP) and Sisterhood Is Global Institute-Jordan (SIGI-J) convened a National Institute for Training of Women Trainers in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) for Social Change in Amman, Jordan from Dec 3-6, 2007. The Institute was facilitated by WLP colleague Usha Venkatachallam of Appropriate IT. Learn more about the Institute through Usha's photo blog below.

To view photo blog in alternate sizes: Large | Full Screen


WLP & SIGI/J Conduct National Institute for Training of Women Trainers in ICTs for Social Change in Jordan

From December 3-6, 2007 in Amman, Jordan, WLP in cooperation with WLP Jordan/Sisterhood Is Global Institute-Jordan (SIGI/J) conducted the first of two National Institutes for Training of Women Trainers in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) for Social Change. The second will take place in Beirut, Lebanon on December 9-12. Nineteen women from across Jordan participated in the Institute. WLP’s new ICT manual, Making IT Our Own: Information & Communication Technology Training of Trainers Manual was used.

View a Photo Slideshow from the Institute.

WLP Program Focus: Young Women's Learning Partnership (YWLP) and International Women's Democracy Network (IWDN)

Young Women's Learning Partnership (YWLP)

WLP's new Young Women's Learning Partnership program aims to empower young people to create a shared vision, to build consensus, strengthen their communication skills, and create action plans to address the issues that impact their lives. Currently Leading to Choices: A Leadership Training Handbook for Women, WLP's leadership training manual which has been culturally adapted and translated into 17 languages is being adapted for young women and girls in Jordan and Bahrain.

Women's Activism: Malaysia and Jordan

Malaysia: Fiesta Feminista
Fiesta Feminista

Malaysia's Joint Action Group for Gender Equality (JAG) kicked-off Fiesta Feminista in mid-June with a three-day "fiesta" meant to celebrate, as the name suggests, the achievements of feminism, to synergize the efforts of women's and social justice groups, and to address the challenges and inequalities that remain. Over 500 women and men from all walks of life took part in workshops, lectures, presentations, exhibitions, performances, and films focusing on a variety of feminist issues with a thematic emphasis on diversity. JAG, which includes Sisters in Islam (SIS) and the All Women's Action Society (AWAM), plans to host a Fiesta Feminista event every two to three years.

WLP Partner Alumnae Spotlight: Past Leading to Choices Participants Reach High Positions

In July 2007, in Jordan, three WLP alumnae won seats in their municipal councils. Additionally, two alumnae of a regional training in Africa have gone on to take leadership roles in NGOs and in civil service. Christiana Thorpe and Daphne Williams were appointed as National Electoral Commissioners of Sierra Leone in 2005 and 2006 respectively, with Ms. Thorpe gaining the distinction of being the first woman to hold that position in the country. Elections were held in Sierra Leone in August 2007, with run-off election results still pending, and Ms. Thorpe and Ms. Williams were key players in overseeing the process.

Jordan Women's Rights Activists Start New Initiative for Upcoming Elections

Sisterhood Is Global Institute/Jordan (SIGI/J)’s team joined women’s rights activists in the national campaign launched on Tuesday July 17th to support female candidates in municipal elections to be held at the end of the month in Jordan.

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Partner Focus: Jordan and Zimbabwe

At the Women’s Learning Partnership, we consider our greatest achievement to be the solidarity, strength, and dynamism of our Partnership based on relationships of trust, respect, and cooperation. Our shared vision, nurtured through six years of collaborative effort and sustained communication, has enabled 18 autonomous national and regional organizations on four continents, working in 17 languages, and functioning under diverse conditions, to work closely together, thereby significantly increasing our impact on the struggle to secure justice and equality for women. The partners inspire each other, learn from one another, and provide support and solidarity in our human rights advocacy. In this issue we spotlight our partners in Jordan and Zimbabwe.

Partnering for Change: Movement Building in the 21st Century

January 21, 2007: At the Seventh World Social Forum in Nairobi, Women’s Learning Partnership (WLP) presented an interactive panel and dialogue with women’s rights activists from Africa and the Middle East who discussed strategies to strengthen social movements, particularly the women’s movement, in an era of crisis for civic organizing. Efforts to achieve gender equality, human rights, and social justice are being increasingly challenged by rising extremism and fundamentalism, wars and conflict, poverty, and violence. Activists are overcoming these barriers by working together to devise innovative, context-relevant strategies that will transform power relations and dynamics with the family, community, and society.

WLP and Sisterhood is Global Institute/Jordan Convene Middle East/North Africa Institute for Women's Leadership in Jordan

Mahnaz Afkhami and Lina QuoraWLP convened the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) Regional Roaming Institute for Women's Leadership from December 9-15, 2003 in Petra, Jordan. Thirty women leaders from eleven Arab countries including Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, the Sudan, and Yemen took part in the week-long Institute for training of trainers. The goal of the Regional Roaming Institute was to empower and train Arab women activists in the Middle East and North Africa to become better trainers and advocates for women's rights and equal participation in civil society. WLP President, Mahnaz Afkhami who was in Jordan for the event said, "The Institute was a positive experience that brought a spirit of hope, optimism, solidarity, and faith in the future so much needed in a region that is undergoing a challenging period of transformation."

The Institute was organized in cooperation with WLP's Jordanian partner, Sisterhood Is Global Institute/Jordan (SIGI/J), one of the most effective Jordanian women's organizations working to promote women's human rights through education and skills training programs. The MENA Regional Institute built upon the material and expertise developed in WLP's pilot international Roaming Institute for Women's Leadership held in Maryland in 2002. Participants included lawyers, educators, grassroots organizers, and activists working to promote democracy, human rights, and women's political participation in the region.

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