Gender equality has evolved from an ideology during the time of the
famed Rosa Parks to a massive human rights movement today. The
movement that took the world by storm has borne many fruits, and society
has made clear progress in this aspect. The significant achievements in this
field and the widespread acknowledgement of gender equality have led to
a slowing down of the once fervent race. The reducing number of protests,
placard marches and campaigns has raised a doubt in the minds of many.
Perhaps, today, in a world as developed as the one we live in, gender
equality and the fight for it is no longer important. They are wrong. Gender
equality, and the fight for it, is still, if not more, important today, than it was in
the past.
Indeed, the fight for gender equality has won many battles. The
suffrage movement won rights for women all across the globe. It not only
increased the value of women in society, it did the same to a woman’s sense
of self-worth. The suffrage movement revealed many injustices and sought
rectification and compensation. It demanded equal playing fields for both
sexes, sending ripples through the many patriarchal societies. It brought
education to women, a right now largely recognised, and allowed women to
contribute to society. Besides raising a woman’s status, it also raised a
woman’s esteem and notion of self-worth.
The fight also showed considerable results in the working world, which
was largely dominated by males. The fight for gender equality has
decimated glass ceilings in jobs across the spectrum, allowing women to take
on higher positional jobs. It award women equal opportunities, with many
companies now function on the system of meritocracy. Today, more than
30% of high position jobs are occupied by women, compared to less than 2%
in the 80s.
In the political arena, a once largely male-dominated world as well,
Condoleezza Rice and Hilary Clinton are among the few women charging
head-on into a once foreign field. Hilary Clinton ran against Barack Obama
in the Democratic elections in 2008, matching him state-to-state until the
end. Clinton is a stellar example of how women can contribute more than
their two cents worth. Despite losing to Obama, Clinton continues in the
political game, serving as the Secretary of State. The fight for gender equality
has opened up many doors, managing to even allow women to take a slice
of the political pie.
The success of the fight is apparent. However, today, many are
questioning if maybe enough doors have been opened for women, and
whether the importance of the fight has disappeared. This may ring true for
developed countries, but for developing countries which are still far lacking in
resources, and the courage to take on an idea seen as absurd to some, or
dangerous to others, women are still at the losing end. It is only because the
developed countries refuse to acknowledge this fact that it appears as if the
fight for gender equality has outlived its welcome.
In strict Muslim societies such as Afghanistan and Iran, backward
traditions and mentalities hinder the countries’ growth. In the former, statistics
have shown that less than 10% of the reported cases of rape have received
justice. Ridiculous clauses, such as requiring at least two adult male witnesses
willing to support the rape claim, prevent many cases from even seeing the
light of day. This injustice has long plagued the country, with little being done
to rectify it. However, this problem is also the reason for Afghanistan’s
“uncivilised” laws, which prevent it from gaining a good standing on the
international level. This could lead to a stagnant economy, or even worse, a
stagnant economy trapped in the dogmatic principles of the past.
In the economic domain, developed countries are no exceptions. The
perception that a male has more value than a female runs deep in countries
like India and China. Both countries are, today, facing an imbalanced sex
ratio, that of China being one female to every 1.6 males. In China’s case, the
one-child policy is the main culprit. Set during revolutionary days, the one-
child policy allows each family to have only one child, or two, in special
cases. While this was done to combat the problem of a population growing
faster than its country could support, it has brought along with it many
problems. In both countries, infanticide ranks high on the causes of infant
deaths. The desire for a more “valuable” male offspring has led to increased
abortion rates and cases of baby girls being abandoned. The imbalanced in
the sex ratio also has many serious repercussions. It has been linked to
increased crime rates, with men unable to find a bride, resorting to
kidnapping, buying or trafficking women to fulfil their needs for
companionship or carnal desires. A largely unmarried society could ironically
lead to the downfall of the family unit, a component of society valued by
Asians. High migration rates could lead to a drastic fall in the working
population, in turn resulting in a weakened economy.
It is age-old out-dated views, captured in equally old sayings such as
“Eighteen goddess-like daughters are not equal to one son with a hump”,
that still call for the fight for gender equality to continue. Statistics like the fact
that women make up 60% of South Korean graduates but constitute less than
25% of the working force only compound the problem. Crusaders of this
mission have yet to fully spread their message, with only larger communities
benefiting. Besides the fact that the “cease-fire” could bring repercussions
such as the ones faced by China and India, the fight for gender equality is
also, above all, a stunning example of human spirit. Just like the heart
warming stories of Chinese natives who went out of their way to help their
fellow men in the Sichuan earthquake, the fight for gender equality tore
social theories such as social Darwinism to bits. It displays human compassion
in a dog-eat-dog world, where the more fortunate gives to their less fortunate
counterparts. Philosophers like Charles Darwin believed that Man is born
selfish. The continued fight for gender equality proves otherwise.
In conclusion, gender equality, and the fight for it, is still very important
today. It will help to level unequal playing fields, giving women a voice and a
place in society. It will not only go down in history as a revolution that caused
old systems to fail, and new, stronger ones to rise, it will also display the full
capacity of the human spirit, with both men and women, spanning the
various races and social standing, joining the biggest human rights
movement of all time.
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