Why is the IWD important?
2007/02/20 19:25:00 GMT+0530
Celebrations taking place all over the world to mark International Women’s Day will acknowledge a century of progress and setbacks in the struggle towards equality for women and men. This annual celebration provides a good moment to take stock of the current position of women in the world today.
The picture that emerges is one of deep poverty and
inequality, underpinned by a systematic denial of women’s human rights
on a global scale. In 2007 the world is still very ill divided, with
inequality between women and men cutting across and compounding other
forms of inequality and exclusion.
Of the 1.3 billion people
worldwide living on less than one dollar a day, a massive seventy per
cent are women and girls. This feminisation of extreme poverty is
possibly the starkest example of how gender inequality undermines human
rights in the contemporary world.
The uneven distribution of
food, water and shelter, the basic essentials of life, says as much
about inequalities within societies as inequalities between them.
According to the UN, globally women put in two-thirds of the world’s
working hours and produce half its food, yet earn only ten per cent of
income and own only one per cent of property. One woman in three will
experience gender-based violence during her lifetime.
Access
to essential public services like basic education and healthcare is
another key area in which women’s human rights are being denied on a
global scale. Around sixty per cent of the 80 million children missing
from primary schools today are girls, with the proportion of girls in
secondary and tertiary education even lower.
Two-thirds of
adults who cannot read and write are women, with adverse knock-on
impacts on their life opportunities, health and incomes. Every minute
of every day a woman dies as a result of pregnancy or childbirth. The
vast majority of these deaths could be prevented through relatively
simple medical interventions, but too many women can’t afford to pay
for treatment or live too far from clinics to access services.
This
sobering picture of women’s lives in the 21st century demonstrates why
equal rights for women need to be at the heart of the global campaign
to end poverty. We know from experience here and in other parts of the
world that universal access to education and health care can transform
societies and deliver sustainable improvements in people’s lives. Yet
progress is painfully slow.
The Millennium Development Goals,
internationally agreed poverty reduction targets, are well off track,
while the economic pressures of globalisation are increasingly and
disproportionately falling on the low-paid and exploited women
agricultural and textile workers at the end of global supply chains.
Women
have plenty to say about this state of affairs, but in many parts of
the world struggle to make their voices heard. The
under-representation of women in public life, and the restrictions
placed on their participation in collective associations such as Trade
Unions inhibit their participation in decisions that affect them.
Worldwide,
a mere 16% of elected parliamentary representatives are women, with far
fewer in ministerial roles. This democratic deficit afflicts wealthy
and poor countries alike.
Here in Scotland we have no room
for complacency: a paltry 15% of our MPs are women, only 39% of MSPs,
and 22% of local councillors. The lack of visible participation of
women in the political sphere all over the world compounds
discrimination, and exacerbates existing inequalities that deprive
women of their rights.
As hundreds of events take place today
around the world, women involved in the international whiteband
campaign, the Global Call to Action Against Poverty are making their
voices heard. In Nepal ten million signatures have been collected to
demand proportionate representation of women in upcoming elections.
In
India women are demanding their rights to decent work, to healthcare
and education. In Peru events have been organised to challenge violence
against women and economic exclusion. Closer to home, women throughout
Scotland will be coming together to demand an end to the shameful
gender pay gap that persists more than twenty years after the
introduction of legislation to ensure equality in the workplace.
There
is plenty evidence from around the world, including Western Europe, to
demonstrate that poverty reduction can be achieved through the
provision of decent public services and the availability of decent
work. At present women are significantly disadvantaged on both these
fronts, to the detriment of society as a whole.
Our efforts to
tackle poverty need to prioritise women and girls in order to create
any kind of meaningful equality. Programmes to tackle poverty that
ignore the existing gender gap in incomes, health, education and
decision-making risk reinforcing those inequalities and deepening the
gulf between women and men.
As we stand up and speak out on
International Women’s Day, let’s honour the great achievements of those
who secured us votes, rights in the workplace, access to education and
healthcare, but let’s also remember those around the world who are
still fighting for those rights, and acknowledge there’s a long way
still to go to make women’s equality truly a reality.
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