KartavyaDesk
news

UNESCO Global Education Report 2025

Kartavya Desk Staff

Context: The UNESCO Global Education Report 2025 reveals that 133 million girls worldwide remain out of school, despite three decades since the Beijing Declaration (1995).

About UNESCO Global Education Report 2025:

Global Snapshot: The report tracks gender equality in education, showing major gains in enrolment but persistent gaps in access and quality.

Eg: Over 91 million more girls attend primary school and 136 million more attend secondary school compared to 1995.

Regional Parity Achievements: Central and South Asia have reached gender parity in secondary education. Sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania continue to lag due to poverty, rural isolation, and conflict. Eg: In countries like Mali and Guinea, fewer than 20% of girls complete lower secondary education.

Central and South Asia have reached gender parity in secondary education.

Sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania continue to lag due to poverty, rural isolation, and conflict. Eg: In countries like Mali and Guinea, fewer than 20% of girls complete lower secondary education.

Persistent Quality Gaps: Only two-thirds of countries have compulsory sexuality education at the primary level, and gender bias remains in textbooks and curricula, reinforcing stereotypes.

Leadership Inequality: Although women form a majority in teaching professions, only 30% of higher education leaders globally are women, revealing structural barriers in academic governance.

Economic and Social Significance: UNESCO emphasises that educating girls is a societal investment, directly linked to poverty reduction, labour participation, and inclusive economic growth.

Eg: The World Bank (2024) estimates that closing the gender education gap could boost global GDP by $15–30 trillion.

Relevance in the UPSC Examination Syllabus

GS Paper I – Indian Society: Links with “role of women and women’s organizations” and “issues related to social empowerment and development.” The gender gap in education reflects broader challenges of patriarchy, inequality, and urban–rural disparity.

• Links with “role of women and women’s organizations” and “issues related to social empowerment and development.”

• The gender gap in education reflects broader challenges of patriarchy, inequality, and urban–rural disparity.

GS Paper II – Governance and Social Justice: Relevant under “welfare schemes for vulnerable sections” and “education and health-related policies.” Illustrates how international commitments (SDG 4, Beijing Declaration) influence India’s policy planning.

• Relevant under “welfare schemes for vulnerable sections” and “education and health-related policies.”

• Illustrates how international commitments (SDG 4, Beijing Declaration) influence India’s policy planning.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News