… invisibility of women’s work; 2) [the] seasonal and part-time nature of women’s work; and 3) unremunerated family … in recent decades, women were more likely to opt for part-time work than in urban areas. In 2010, women represented 53% … by promoting technical progress and ensuring the optimum use of the factors of production, in particular labour to …
… to: water, air and soil quality waste management and the use of chemicals environmental assessment green public … and thus to climate change. For example, women spend more time at home due to care duties, and thus depend on domestic … clean and modern energy services, save both women and men time, reduce accidents and promote better health. However, …
… one of the most pervasive human rights violations of our time. In the EU, 9 out of 10 victims of intimate partner … report on the symptoms of disease or illness. At the same time, men usually tend to pay less attention than women to … of health. Across the EU, women and men make different use of health systems and services, and this affects their …
… also experience additional physical constraints, lack of time and/or lack of childcare facilities. Establishing gender … in all sphere at all levels of sport, equal access to and use of sport resources , equal rights through the elimination … 58/5 was adopted which called on governments to use sport as a means to promote education, health and peace. …
… is experienced differently by women and men, as they use different modes of transport for different purposes and … women travel: because women are far more likely to be part-time workers, they travel off-peak more often than men. In … worth emphasising that there are gender differences in timeuse and time poverty. Women’s multiple roles often …