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  8/ Jordan Marks International Women’s Day with Major Legislative, Representation Gains

Amman, Mar. 8 (Petra) – When Jordan’s newly elected parliament convened following the 2024 polls, the presence of 27 women in the chamber marked more than just a numerical shift; it signaled the culmination of a decade-long legislative overhaul aimed at moving women from the periphery to the center of the state’s second centenary.

As the Kingdom marks International Women’s Day under the theme "Rights, Justice, Work.. for all Women and Girls," the focus has shifted from symbolic gestures to a "fundamental pillar" of national policy.

Since His Majesty King Abdullah II ascended the throne in 1999, the institutionalization of gender equality has evolved into a constitutional mandate.

A recent amendment to Article 6 now explicitly binds the state to empowering women, ensuring equal opportunity, and providing protection against all forms of violence and discrimination.

The political landscape is perhaps the most visible frontier of this transformation. Driven by new election and political party laws, women now hold 19.6% of the seats in the House of Representatives – a jump from 13.8% in the previous term. This rise is underpinned by a local list quota of 18 seats and a legal requirement that women comprise at least 20% of any political party's founding members. At the grassroots level, the shift is even more pronounced: by 2025, women accounted for 44% of political party memberships nationwide.

This political momentum is mirrored in a sweeping economic agenda. Under the Economic Modernization Vision (2023–2033), Jordan is attempting to double women’s labor market participation. To dismantle long-standing barriers, the labor code was rewritten to define and prohibit sexual harassment, ban hiring discrimination, and codify the principle of equal pay for work of equal value. To support the transition for working mothers, the state has introduced flexible work systems and mandated that larger firms provide onsite childcare facilities.

The international community has taken note. Jordan’s score in the World Bank’s "Women, Business and the Law" report surged by 12.5 points in 2024, reaching 59.4 out of 100. Domestically, the private sector is also aligning with these goals; Jordan currently ranks first in the Arab world for the number of companies – 188 in total – signing onto the UN's Women’s Empowerment Principles (WEPs).

"The woman is no longer just a partner," noted Senator Nasima Al-Fakhri, rapporteur of the Senate Women’s Committee. She observed that the granting of financial and administrative independence to the Jordanian National Commission for Women has bolstered the Kingdom’s ability to coordinate these national efforts. From the Cabinet to corporate boardrooms, the strategy is clear: treating gender equality not as an isolated social issue, but as a prerequisite for sustainable development and national security.

//Petra// AA

08/03/2026 12:45:17

 

 

       

 

 

 

 

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