What is gender equality ?
“The future isn’t female. It’s equal.” Gender equality is
also about overcoming male gender stereotypes. The global journalism platform
Fair Planet asked Agata Slota, from Palladium, and Julia Hanne, from Spring
Accelerator what gender equality means to them. Read the full interview here.
Working with governments, businesses and investors,
Palladium believes that global change will come from merging these worlds and
powers together. SPRING is an accelerator working with growth-oriented
businesses on innovations that can transform the lives of adolescent girls aged
10-19 living across East Africa and South Asia.
What does gender equality mean to you in 2019?
Agata: Gender equality means living in a world free from
fear caused by the circumstance of our XY chromosomes. It’s a place where women
and girls no longer have to worry what will happen if they try to live their
lives the way they want to live them – whether that’s becoming a web developer,
aiming for the highest political office, choosing not to have children, or not
mimicking male attributes in the workplace in order to be taken seriously.
Unfortunately, today these fears are completely rational.
Sexism is rife in the tech sector, male and female political candidates are
judged by different standards during elections because of gender stereotypes,
famous women without children are regularly asked by the media about their
childfree choice while their male counterparts are not, and bosses in the
business world still often reward aggressive competition over collaboration. So
it’s no surprise fear keeps women back. Gender equality would mean it no longer
would.
Julia: Inequality creates struggles for all members of
society. Gender equality in 2019 means to me that we can finally welcome
billions of women into more active leadership roles in education, business,
politics, science, and technology. Or in other words, that every human being
has an equal go at life and that there is a fundamental acceptance that society
as a whole cannot progress if half of its population is held back. It’s simple:
when more women work and go to school, economies grow, countries progress.
Gender equality in 2019 also means to me that men are free from masculine
stereotypes that require them to be the ‘stronger sex,’ create a mental divide
from girls from birth and fundamentally constrain them in their ability to
express their emotions for fear of being labelled ‘weak’. These stereotypes
perpetuate gender inequality for all. The future isn’t female, it’s equal.
We still have a long way to go. 2.7 billion women are still
legally restricted from having the same job choices as men and the labour force
participation rate for women aged 25-54 is 63% compared to 94% for men. So far,
only six countries in the world provide equal legal work rights to men and
women – exposing a big gap between my ideals for gender equality in 2019 and
the progress that needs to be made to achieve these.
Can you give us an example of positive progress from
recent years you see as a benchmark for the future of gender equality?
Agata: An extremely important area of progress towards
gender equality is the improved access to modern contraceptives in the world’s
69 lowest-income countries – an increase of about 17% since 2012. A woman’s
ability to determine whether and when she will have children is the basis for
all women’s empowerment – without this choice, women will always be at a
disadvantage.
Unfortunately, today over 200 million women in developing
countries still do not have access to modern family planning. Not only does
this impact on their ability to fulfil their goals but also on their health.
We need to keep striving to give women greater access to
contraception and more decision-making power over family planning. And we need
to do this in a way that considers the local culture and norms. The U.K. aid
funded and Palladium-managed Maternal, Newborn and Child Health 2 programme,
for example, is improving access to family planning in religious and
conservative parts of northern Nigeria by discussing the “healthy timing and
spacing of pregnancies”, and doing so with both men and women. This kind of
nuance and sensitivity are necessary if we are to reach the other 200 million
women.
Julia: Rwanda has made some incredible strides that place it
ahead of many Western countries, including France and the U.S. for example,
that demonstrate that it’s possible to achieve at least some progress in
low-income countries and environments where women are often marginalised, and
therefore why not in the U.K. or elsewhere also? In 2018, the country was
ranked among the world’s top 5 leaders in gender equality, along with Sweden,
Norway, Iceland and Finland, despite also making it onto the UN’s list of the
worlds’ 47 least developed countries. Rwanda has also had the highest
percentage of female political parliamentarians in the world due to quotas that
were put in place after the genocide.
Talking about benchmarks, there’s no way around referencing
the #MeToo movement. Moving beyond individual cases, I don’t think that there
has ever been a scandal that has caused a similar avalanche of public debates
gripping so many sectors across the world, including the development sector,
and leading the introduction of new safeguarding policies and laws even if
their effectiveness are subject to debate. These debates have shaped the
definitions around ‘consent’ and sexual harassment and helped shift the balance
of power a bit for sexual abuse victims for generations to come. It has also
helped remove the stigma male sexual abuse victims face.
Who is a female leader you admire and why?
Agata: Nima Elbagir. Nima is an investigative journalist,
currently at CNN, who focuses her reporting on human rights abuses. She’s
covered slave auctions, sexual exploitation of female migrants trying to get to
Europe, child labour in DRC’s cobalt mines, child marriage in Sudan, the Ebola
outbreak, the conflict in Yemen, and more.
Journalism is under threat – money for quality reporting is
scarce, the media is under attack by heads of state, and journalists’ lives are
increasingly at risk. I admire so many journalists who have the courage to tell
the stories that need to be told, often at high personal cost. Nima is one of
the great journalists. She leads by example, which is the most laudable form of
leadership.
Julia: I’ll go with an answer that may be slightly unusual.
I don’t think that one single individual in the public sphere can fully
personify an exemplary female leader to me. The most inspiring people I’ve met
are away from the public spotlight.
Through my work at SPRING, I’ve met some pretty amazing
female entrepreneurs in resource-constrained and male dominated environments
who have managed to graduate, come up with a life-changing innovation, set up a
business, go to work, employ and empower other women and marginalised
communities, and pursue a vision of delivering impact for these people in their
countries – every day, against all odds. Either through the power of
information in helping women make sexual and reproductive health choices or
through access to education and healthcare. One female entrepreneur I recently
visited in Bangladesh runs a digital agency, Women in Digital, which trains
women to pursue careers in IT. She frequently faced a tirade of abuse and
threats from her neighbours and other men in her building for the work that she
does, telling her she should go home where she belongs. She eventually had to
move offices. And that’s just one example of the many obstacles and social
stigma she continuously faces and overcomes. All these women with their untold
stories are my role models.
This also includes my mother. She had to work in the fields
instead of going to school from when she was a child, came to Germany as an
adult, learned German while hardly being able to read and write, and did
multiple physically demanding jobs for decades to help raise and support two children
through school and university.
Apart from that, there’s been a remarkable rise
in strong, diverse, female American politicians that are redefining
representation in the country’s political landscape, such as Elizabeth Warren,
Alexandria Ocasia-Cortez, Kamala Harris and Nancy Pelosi. This is really
encouraging irrespective of their political orientation.
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