Title: Womens Citizenship
1Womens Citizenship
- Kathleen Lynch, Equality Studies Centre, UCD
- Presentation to Banúlacht International Womens
Day conference, March 8th 2007, Ballymun, Dublin
2An egalitarian societyEquality From Theory to
Action( Baker, J., Lynch, K., Cantillon, S. and
Walsh, J. 2004
- Economic Equality - in economic relations -earned
incomes, wages, wealth ownership and
transmission, and welfare support -goal equality
of resources - Socio-cultural Equality -in systems of
communication, interpretation and representation
(how women and girls are represented in the
media, education, the churches) goalequality of
respect and recognition - Political Equality -wherever power is enacted -in
formal politics, on boards, committees, in work
and family/personal relations goalequality of
power in public and private institutions - Affective Equality (emotional context) -wherever
relations of love, care, and solidarity operate -
personal relationships, work relations, community
and associational relations - goalequality in the doing of care work and
equality in the receiving of care it integrates
a concepts dependency and interdependency into
our understanding of equality and citizenship
3Contexts of Forms of Inequality
Inequality impact varies across groups
(all interface)
- Economic Context
- Cultural Context
- Political Context
- Affective Context
- Inequality of resources and opportunities This
is the generative source of inequality for low
income groups -A social class issue but also a
gender, disability, ethnic identity issue -
- -Inequality of respect or recognition The
generative source of inequality for Travellers/
new communities/gay and lesbians/ Black
people/disabled people/ - -Inequality of power generative source of
inequality for children in particular but also
for other groups - -Inequality of love, care and solidarity
Generative source of inequality for those
deprived of love and care e.g. refugee children
migrant workers deprived of family intimacy/ - Generative source of inequality between women and
men women are the primary carers
4Problems with Liberal and Neo-liberal views of
Citizenship
- Liberal perspective
- Citizenship is equated with the public sphere
citizens are workers in paid employment, people
who engage in politics, the arts, cultural life
etc - The dominant view of citizenship is silent on the
reality of dependency and interdependency that is
central to human existence - Much of the work that women do as citizens is not
counted in the definition of citizenship care
and love work is defined as a private natural
matter. This privatisation of the carer
citizen and the cared for citizen is deeply
oppressive of women as it silences their work and
makes it possible for the market and the State to
free ride on that work by no-pay and low pay - Neo-liberal politics offers a market view of
membership of society - citizen is defined as a consumer, client with
the capacity to buy services/products - no rights
guaranteed by the state - citizens are defined as autonomous, privatised
the anxious classes - focus is on caring for oneself - individual
responsibility for failure - states role in public service provision is to
be seriously circumscribed - ending the
subvention to the development of civil society
institutions - via cutting community development
funding, community education funding
5A Care-less model of Citizenship is strongly
anti-women
- The Market economy has become the primary
producer of cultural logic, of cultural value
the emotional labour in loving and caring and
showing solidarity is denied - Deep divisions between the public world, where
there is silence on care and love, and the
private and community worlds where
care-related and development work is an
over-riding concern - The masculinised character of the public sphere
is masked by the disallowing of the language of
care and love in that domain - Love, care and solidarity are seen as a necessity
and a nuisance - caring is coloured by the context with which it
is associated- oppressive - the coloniser within leads us to distance
ourselves from caring - Are we being forced to emulate the idealised
image of the self sufficient rational
increasingly macho-defined citizen? - need to deconstruct care work from a feminist
perspective - enable care discourses to redefine
public discourse, policies and politics
6Political challenges for women
- We need to challenge the division between
strong publics and weak - sub-altern publics the weak must define the
strong - 3 types of public sphere - and where are women
in these? - discourse sphere defining the language of
public debate? - the policy sphere - defining policies?
- the political sphere defining national and
international politics? - Women are often involved in what Nancy Fraser
calls subaltern counter-politics community
politics - Why? - because local community discourses,
policies and politics has been focused on the
care ethic but this is inadmissible in the
strong public sphere of national and
international politics
7Challenges
- Exhortations for women to join formal politics
often ignore the way political life is defined as
being one that is only open to Care Commanders
those who can get others to do their care work - We need to address womens fears of national and
international politics fear of the media in
particular - An ongoing challenge for women is that womens
issues are not seen to be political issues yet
care issues and reproductive rights are womens
issues for all classes and groups - If women do not engage in formal politics, male
power will continue to hold sway undisturbed and
womens citizenship in all spheres will thereby
remain diminished, Ruth Lister
8The local and global issues of importance for
women activists
- Making feminist ideology central to egalitarian
and socialist thinking - Control of opinion formation (public ideology)
especially in the media but also in education a
vital means for setting the political agenda - Making sure that feminist language becomes
normalised in public debate - Moving from community politics to national and
global politics - Ensuring feminist women become leaders not just
women of any viewpoint ongoing problem of
opportunism
9What inspires me as an activist
- Seeing social changes happen when we work for
change - Belief in the goodness of all people and the
desire to do good howsoever defined - A belief in the equality of all peoples
- Deep sense of anger about all forms of social
injustice - Good health and security of income from having a
permanent job! - Leaders who fight for equality in all walks of
life - Solidarity of colleagues in UCD Equality Studies
Centre, including our students past and present - The love and appreciation of those closest to me
- NEVER GIVE IN to injustice!
10Message re local and global connections
- Need to create alliances with women from the
South and East who are already living in Ireland - Feminists have the potential to lead a new
egalitarian vision of Irish society and the
global order - We must put the concept of solidarity into
politics so that a feminist ethic of care become
central to global thinking rather than a
capitalist ethic of greed - We need feminist leaders not women leaders
- We need to create alliance intellectually with
women in different countries to globalise our
alternative perspectives