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The Rights of Women

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Title: The Rights of Women


1
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2
  • In the last century, women have made substantial
    gains in claiming their rights

3
  • However, the struggle for equality continues.

4
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5
What are the Rights of Women?
6
  • All women have the right to
  • Safety and Security
  • Protection and Due Process
  • Non-Discrimination
  • Work
  • Education
  • Health
  • Housing
  • Political Participation

7
  • Key documents that define the rights of women
  • The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948)
  • The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
    Discrimination Against Women (1979) (CEDAW)
  • The Declaration on the Elimination of Violence
    Against Women (1993) (DEVAW)
  • The Beijing Declaration (1995)

8
  • Government Obligations
  • Respect Governments must not deprive any woman
    of her rights under domestic and international
    law and must refrain from taking retrogressive
    measures that are incompatible with the rights of
    women.
  • Protect Governments must take measures to
    prevent individuals or third parties, such as
    employers or civil society organizations, from
    interfering in any way with the realization of
    the rights of women
  • Fulfill Governments must adopt necessary
    measures and create an enabling environment such
    that all women can enjoy their full rights.
  • Non-discrimination Governments must work to
    prevent discriminatory outcomes due to class,
    race, gender, language, or other factors, in
    order to ensure equity in the fulfillment of the
    rights of women.

9
  • Government Obligations Cont.
  • Take Steps Governments must take steps, to the
    maximum of their available resources, to work
    progressively toward ensuring the rights of all
    women.
  • Meet Minimum Core Governments must ensure the
    satisfaction of the minimal, but essential,
    standards laid out in the UDHR and immediately
    address extreme situations of abuse.
  • Protect the Most Vulnerable Governments must
    actively reach out to the most frequently
    marginalized and excluded women, who face the
    greatest barriers in realizing their rights.
  • Monitor and Report Governments must monitor and
    report on their fulfillment of the rights of
    women and ensure accountability for their actions
    and inactions.

10
  • Does the U.S. Recognize the Rights of Women?

11
The U.S. recognizes the basic rights of all human
beings, including women.
  • The U.S. has signed The Universal Declaration of
    Human Rights (UDHR)
  • Everyone is entitled to all the rights and
    freedoms set forth in this Declaration, without
    distinction of any kind, such as race, colour,
    sex, language, religion, political or other
    opinion, national or social origin, property,
    birth or other status. (Article 2, UDHR)
  • The U.S. has ratified the International Covenant
    on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
  • The States Parties to the present Covenant
    undertake to ensure the equal right of men and
    women to the enjoyment of all civil and political
    rights set forth in the present Covenant.
    (Article 3, ICCPR)

12
  • The U.S. Constitution also recognizes the Rights
    of Women
  • 14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause
  • No state shall ... deny to any person within
    its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
    laws". (U.S. Constitution, Amendment 14)
  • The 19th Amendment Right to Vote
  • The right of the citizens of the United States
    to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the
    United States or by any State on account of
    sex.. (U.S. Constitution, Amendment 19)

13
The U.S. has not ratified the major treaty
recognizing the rights of women
  • The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
    Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)

The U.S. is the only industrialized country that
has not ratified the treaty.
14
  • Does the U.S.
  • Adequately
  • Protect the Rights of Women?

15
  • We ask justice, we ask equality, we ask that all
    the civil and political rights that belong to
    citizens of the United States, be guaranteed to
    us and our daughters forever.
  • Susan B. Anthony,
  • Declaration of Rights for
    Women, July 1876

16
Safety and Security
17
All Women Have a Right to
  • SAFETY AND SECURITY
  • The right to life, liberty, and security of
    person.1
  • The right to be free from violence within the
    family2 and to protection from exploitation and
    abuse.3

18
Safety and Security
  • Battering is the number one cause of injury to
    women in the U.S.4
  • Domestic violence is a leading cause of
    homelessness among women.5
  • Up to 50,000 women and children are trafficked
    into the U.S. each year from other countries.6

19
Equal Protection
and Due Process
20
All Women Have a Right to
EQUAL PROTECTION AND DUE PROCESS The right to be
treated equally under the law and be protected by
the law without discrimination.7
21
Equal Protection and Due Process
  • Battered immigrant women face many barriers to
    protection from violence, including language,
    culture and immigration status.8
  • Women in prison are not adequately protected, and
    experience rape, sexual assault, and groping
    during searches.9
  • Incarcerated women face threats to their health
    and families through policies such as shackling
    during childbirth.10

22
Non-Discrimination
23
All Women Have a Right to
NON-DISCRIMINATION The right to live free from
personal and institutional discrimination based
on ones sex.11
24
Non-Discrimination
  • Congress has failed to pass a comprehensive
    statutory ban on sex discrimination comparable to
    the bans on other forms of discrimination.
  • Women face outright discrimination in the
    military. Women are excluded from certain
    positions, and therefore have trouble ascending
    to leadership roles.12

25
Work
26
All Women Have a Right to
WORK
  • including
  • equal pay for equal work
  • equal employment opportunities
  • policies that ensure women do not lose
    employment, seniority, or benefits due to
    pregnancy.13

27
Work
  • Full-time working women still make only 77.8
    cents for every dollar earned by men.14
  • Women are also more likely to work part-time or
    to hold minimum wage jobs, which limits their
    access to benefits.15
  • A lack of family support policies forces women to
    face a tradeoff between good care for their
    children and equal career opportunities.16

28
Education
29
  • Of all the civil rights for which the world has
    struggled and fought for 5,000 years, the right
    to learn is undoubtedly the most fundamental...
  • W.E.B. DuBois

30
All Women Have a Right to
EDUCATION Equal access to and equal opportunity
in all forms and aspects of education regardless
of sex.17
31
Education
  • Women hold only 24 percent of full professor
    positions in the U.S.18
  • In engineering and science, the numbers are even
    worse, ranging from 3 to 15.4 percent.19
  • Among Division I schools in 2000, spending on
    mens athletics was nearly double what was spent
    on womens sports.20

32
Health
33
"It is my aspiration that health finally will be
seen not as a blessing to be wished for, but as a
human right to be fought for."
United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan
34
All Women Have a Right to
HEALTH
  • The right to the highest attainable level of
    physical and mental health
  • Equal access to health services, including family
    planning and reproductive health.21

35
Health
  • Women pay a higher percentage of out-of-pocket
    costs than men and are more likely to avoid
    receiving needed care because of cost.22
  • In nine states, insurance companies can refuse
    coverage to victims of domestic violence.23
  • Women receive different standards of care. As a
    result, women who have a heart attack are more
    likely to die or have a second heart attack than
    men.24

36
Housing
37
All Women Have a Right to
HOUSING
Access to affordable, secure, and stable housing,
with special attention to women living in poverty
and female heads of household.25
38
Housing
  • 37 of U.S. cities cite domestic violence as the
    primary cause of homelessness.26
  • Unjust zero-tolerance policies allow landlords
    to evict victims of domestic violence.27
  • The lack of affordable housing adversely affects
    women and their families as women make up the
    majority of minimum wage workers and tend to be
    the sole wage earners in single-parent families.28

39
Political Participation
40
  • Women belong in the house and the Senate.
  • Author Unknown

41
All Women Have a Right to
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
The right to vote, to stand for election, to be
involved in formulating government policy and to
actively participate in political life.30
42
Political Participation
  • No woman has ever held either of the two highest
    offices in the United States, President or Vice
    President.
  • Women currently hold only 16.8 of Congressional
    seats, a record high percentage.31

43
Graph by Lane Kenworthy29
44
Womens Rights Resources
  • American Civil Liberties Union (www.aclu.org/women
    srights/)
  • Amnesty International USA (http//www.amnestyusa.o
    rg/)
  • Human Rights Watch (http//www.hrw.org/)
  • National Organization for Women
    (http//www.now.org/)
  • National Womens Law Center (http//www.nwlc.org/)
  • Office on Violence Against Women - United States
    Justice Department (http//www.ovw.usdoj.gov/)
  • OWL National (http//www.owl-national.org/)
  • StopVAW (http//www.stopvaw.org/)
  • The White House Project (http//www.thewhitehousep
    roject.org/)
  • Women Matter (http//www.womenmatter.org/)
  • Womens Law (http//www.womenslaw.org/)
  • The Younger Womens Task Force (http//www.ywtf.or
    g/)
  • YWCA (http//www.ywca.org/)

45
Image Sources
  • Equal Work Deserves Equal Pay! Accessed
    February 2009. http//www.mylearning.org/learning/
    womens-rights-the-equal-pay-debate/Womens20rights
    .jpg
  • Homeless Women Rally. Accessed February 2009.
    http//flickr.com/photos/grantneufeld/2732889622/
  • Man and Woman on Scale. Accessed March 2009
    http//www.wethewomen.org/images/women-power_18.jp
    g
  • Men Only. Accessed February 2009.
    http//custom-essay.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/20
    08/05/124.png
  • Men Working. Accessed February 2009.
    http//neatorama.cachefly.net/images/2008-07/men-w
    orking-sign.jpg
  • Percentage of men and women in poverty by
    race/ethnicity. Accessed February 2009.
    http//www.americanprogress.org/issues/2008/10/img
    /women_poverty1.jpg
  • Votes for Women. Accessed February 2009.
    http//theunknowncandidate.blogspot.com/2006/11/un
    ited-states-women-lag-in-gender.html
  • Womens Share in Parliament. Accessed February
    2009. http//lanekenworthy.files.wordpress.com/200
    8/11/leadingtheway-figure1-version2.png

46
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48
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