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The Connexions Annual: Introduction to Women chapter
The modern women’s movement has had a profound and far–reaching
impact on almost all spheres of society. It has challenged and changed
the way women see themselves, their expectations, their treatment
in society. It has shaken and transformed relationships and the
family, the law, the educational system, the labour movement, and
much else.
Yet for all its success, the challenges that remain are enormous.
Women with full–time jobs earn about 65% of what men make. Over
50% of one–parent families headed by women are poor, as against
9% of those headed by men. The pension system works against many
women, especially those who have been homemakers or who have taken
time off from jobs to raise children. 50% of elderly women live
in poverty. Women are subjected to violence or harassment in the
home, the workplace, and on the street. The number of women’s shelters
is nowhere near to meeting the need. Women’s right to reproductive
choice, to control over their own bodies, uncertain to begin with,
is under attack.
Because women tend to be poorer and economically more vulnerable,
they are also hit harder by many of the other problems that exist
in Canadian society. Non–existent or inadequate child care services
make it harder for women to earn a decent living. A lack of affordable
housing hits single mothers and elderly women particularly hard.
Native women, immigrant women, and women who belong to visible minorities
are disadvantaged even within their own communities. Free trade
is expected to be especially devastating to industries like textiles
which have a high concentration of older female workers.
These problems continue because they are built into the structure
of Canadian society, and also because there are still many forces which reinforce sexism in public and private life,
and which socialize our children into that system.
The various elements of the women’s movement have adopted a wide
variety of strategies to challenge sexist structures and ideology. Some groups are working to fight discrimination
in the workplace. Others are providing services to battered, disabled, or immigrant women, services designed
to help them take control over their own lives. Many groups focus
on education or self–help.
Whatever the particular focus, many women’s groups are united by
the idea that the women’s movement needs to concern itself with the entire social system, and with the nature
of human relationships within that social system. They believe that the liberation of women cannot be achieved unless
the whole system of oppressive and unjust structures is confronted,
and equally that those structures cannot be dismantled unless the
oppression of women within them is forcefully challenged.
This perspective applies also to movements for social change, who
have been and are being forced to confront their own sexism and
their own oppression of the women within them, and in the process
are themselves being transformed even as they work to transform
society.
Ulli Diemer
Aussi disponible en français:
L'Annuel
Connexions: Introduction au chapitre des femmes
También disponible en español: El
Anuario de Conexiones: Introducción al Capítulo de
las Mujeres
Other Overview Articles from the Connexions Annual:
Introduction
to the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Arts, Media, Culture section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Community, Urban, Housing section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Development, International section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Economy, Poverty, Work section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Education, Children section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Environment, Land Use, Rural section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Health section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Human Rights, Civil Liberties section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Lesbians, Gays section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Native Peoples section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Peace section of the Connexions Annual
Introduction
to the Women section of the Connexions Annual
Resource
and Reading List from the Connexions Annual
Other Resources and Links:
Connexions
Online: Selected Women’s Links
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