One of the city’s earliest studies captured data on the differences between men and women’s experiences and movement patterns. It revealed that women had a more varied pattern of movement and identified that even the simplest and inexpensive forms of gender-sensitive interventions can help improve their everyday experience. These interventions include easier access to public transport, wider pavements and ramps for pushchairs and prams.
In the UK, a recent study carried out by the Royal Town Planning Institute (2021) asserts that gender mainstreaming has not been effectively implemented as a means of integrating the needs of all genders equally into spatial planning. It further suggests that the integration of a gender dimension into spatial policy-making has been held back by a host of different factors, including inadequacies of both the education and planning systems, resulting in gender inequalities going largely undiscussed. These inadequacies hinder women’s ability to shape policies and progress decisions that have positive implications for gender equality attainment.
When dealing with gender mainstreaming, many people overlook the great, and often indirect, rippling effect that it has on creating an overall inclusive city. What we have learned from Vienna is that the integration of a gender dimension in the education system and daily working practices has helped to facilitate an overall attitudinal change. It has resulted in female-friendly development initiatives that have significant benefits for children, the elderly, disabled, as well as able-bodied men and women.
Thus, there is a strong argument that gender mainstreaming does not place women’s needs above (and therefore risks undermining) the needs of other protected characteristic groups. On the contrary, incorporating a gender dimension at all levels of planning, decision-making and design recognises the multifaceted nature of discrimination and the complexities associated with equality attainment, encouraging us to think about the different needs of all genders, at all ages, of all abilities, and of all races, religions and beliefs.