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Sonaimuthu SAADOW INDIA Presentation On Gender Inequality

This document discusses gender inequality in India and strategies for advancing women's status. It notes that while women had high status in ancient Indian texts, over time practices like purdah, dowry, and sati lowered women's status. Today, issues like female feticide resulting in a declining sex ratio, domestic violence, lack of access to healthcare and education, and economic constraints continue to impact women's welfare and condition in India. Strategies proposed to promote women's advancement include increasing literacy, education, skills development, employment opportunities, and ensuring women's rights through legal and policy measures.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views35 pages

Sonaimuthu SAADOW INDIA Presentation On Gender Inequality

This document discusses gender inequality in India and strategies for advancing women's status. It notes that while women had high status in ancient Indian texts, over time practices like purdah, dowry, and sati lowered women's status. Today, issues like female feticide resulting in a declining sex ratio, domestic violence, lack of access to healthcare and education, and economic constraints continue to impact women's welfare and condition in India. Strategies proposed to promote women's advancement include increasing literacy, education, skills development, employment opportunities, and ensuring women's rights through legal and policy measures.

Uploaded by

AdimeshLochan
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Gender inequality in India, the

significance of being born as woman

It is impossible to think about the welfare of the world unless


the condition of women is improved
-Swami Vivekananda

Presented by :
P.SONAIMUTHU
Executive Director, SAADOW
Natham - 624401, Dindigul District, Tamil Nadu, India, www.saadow.org, E-mail : [email protected]
India
 India's social structure is a unique blend of diverse
religions, cultures and racial groups.
 All the great religion of the world, viz, the Hindus, the
Muslims, the Christians, etc, are found here.
 There are 18 major literary languages, apart from
numerous other languages and dialects.
 There is striking diversity between various communities
and groups in kinships and marriages rites, customs,
inheritance and modes of living.
 Diversity is also seen in the pattern of rural as well as
urban settlements, community life, cultural and social
behaviour as also in the institutional framework.
 The uniqueness of Indian social structure lies in its “unity
amidst diversity”
Gender Disparity
From ancient to present
 Women in ancient India were held in high esteem
 The position of a woman in the Vedas and the
Upanishads was that of a mother (maata) or
goddess (Devi).
 In the Manusmriti, woman was considered as a
precious being
 In the early Vedic age, girls were looked after with
care.
 The practice of polygamy deteriorated the status
of woman
Gender Disparity
 In the medieval period, the practices of purdha
system, dowry and sati came into being
 With the passage of time, the status of woman was
lowered.
 After the development of science and technology,
female foeticide is being practiced on a large scale.
This has led to a drop in the female ratio.
 According to the census 2001, the sex ratio in India is
927 females to 1,000 males. Dowry have become
common.
 Female infanticide practices in few areas
Gender Disparity
 In many parts of India, women are viewed as an
economic liability despite contribution in several
ways to our society and economy
 The crime graph against women is increasing at
an alarming rate.
 The condition of an Indian widow is quite
deplorable.
 At home, the woman's contribution towards home
as a housewife is not recognized..
 Domestic Violence, Rape, Sexual Exploitation,
molestation, eve-teasing, forced prostitution,
Sexual harassment at work places etc are a
common affair today
Disparity at Birth
Infant mortality
 Birth/growth/survival

 Foeticide/sex ratio 972/1000 in 2001

Maternal mortality
 27% are mm

 40-50% receive antenatal care


Infanticide
Sex ratio
 972/1000

Reasons
 Male Heir for the family

 Huge dowry

 Continued financial support to girl child

 Poverty

 Domestic violence

 Caste system
Methods of infanticide
 Feeding with Calotropis Procera & Euphorbia
Tricalli latex
 Putting paddy in to the mouth
 Not allowing to feed milk
 Closing nose
 More artificial feeding of milk
 Covering with wet cloths
 Live burial
Maternal mortality
 Health seeking behavior
 Priority to male child than female child
 Anemic fully growth potential
Malnutrition

Reasons
 The UN estimates that 2.1 million Indian children
die before reaching the age of 5 every year – four
every minute
 Mostly from preventable illnesses such as
diarrhoea, typhoid, malaria, measles and
pneumonia.
 Every day 1,000 Indian children die because of
diarrhoea alone.
At work
 Working environment
 Unequal wages
 Undignified treatment
 Working in odd hours
 Sexual harassment
 Higher working hours
 Engaged in harmful industries
 Occupational hazards working roughly twice as
many hours as men
 Nearly 27 percentage are accounted by unpaid
activities.
Violence against women
Forced in to subordinate position
 Every 42 minutes a sexual harassment occurs.
 Every 43 minutes a woman kidnapped.
 Every 93 minutes a woman is burnt a very dowry.
 Pre quarter of reported rapes involve girls under
the age of 16 years.
Restricted out-side participation
 Trafficking / selling of girl child
 Every 26 minutes women is molested.
 Every 34 minutes a rape take place.
Poor health care
 Neglecting during illness
 Recognition of illness by herself
 Health services as a last resort
 Reluctance to be examined by male doctors
Lack of Education
 65.38% only, male 73.53% female 53.7
 Poor literacy – gender gap in literacy rate
 No higher education – up to Higher secondary
Economic Constraints
 Kept as dependants
 No equal property rights - As against law
 Loans of men is paid back by women
 Economic uncertainty
 Denial in inheritance of properties to orphaned /
deserted
Discriminative socialization process
 Customary practices
 In household activities only (boys not allowed)
 Restricted to play
 Isolation / separation in schools/public places
 Restricted to move freely
Detrimental cultural practices
 After marriage – husbands are dominating
 Dominance from In-laws family / members
 Never / rarely considered for any decision making
 Can not support her parents
 Limitations in continuing relationships with brothers /
sisters / relatives
 Child / Early marriage
 Patriarchal attitudes
 Not able to continue girl/boy friends friendship after
marriage
In Governance
 After over sixty years of independence women are still
exploited
 The 73rd and 74th constitutional amendments have provided
33 percent reservation for women in the Panchayati Raj
System
 Panchayat / Parliament totally 790 seats by filling 6.6-8.4
percentage.
 Women Reservation bill delayed
 In PRI only in reserved seats (not in open Competition)/ cast
disparity.
 Men domination in administration
Social Advancement of women
Self Advancement
 Reflexive dimension of employment

 Assert themselves what they thought

 Self awareness

 Capacity building.
Social Advancement of women
Contd…
Advancement as a group
 Enough group members/meetings

 Adequate support

 Intimacy / involvement/resources

 Decision making / problem solving ability/

leadership qualities enhancement/ participation


Social Advancement of women
Contd…
Advancement of community
 Planning / implementation/ evaluation /bias
discrimination.
Economic advancement
 Right to choice/savings

 EDP skills/ marketing

 Information /linkages/external, internal resource

mobilization.
Social Advancement of women
Contd…
Psychological advancement
 Fulfill helplessness

 Self respect/strong determination/ assertive nature

/ motivation / win self confidence.


Social advancement
 Power distribution / Socio / equality dissemination
of knowledge about health nutrition, literacy,
education, freedom and opportunities/ adoption of
new practices
Social Advancement of women
Contd…
Political advancement
 Decision making / political rights / participation in

political Campaign
 Ability to solve political issues

 Solving health and social problems

 Confronting exploitative power

 Public life participation

 Control over – their self confidence


Social Advancement of women
Contd…
Educational Advancement
 Prime avenue of women empowerment.

 Break down of power stereotyping

 Legal understanding / rights / gender

sensitization / health education etc.


 Strengthen own income generation activities.

 Dalit empowerment / SHGs movement


Social Advancement of women
Contd…
Technological advancement
 Technical means and skills characteristic of

particular civilization group or period.


 Technology habitually designates the complex of

information, skills methods and machinery


required for the manufacture utilization and
making of useful objects – UNO source.
 Man - Mutual, Management, planning, organizing

etc.
Strategies for advancement of women
 Literacy
Formal Education
 Give greater employment opportunity
 Primary / secondary dropout of female child is
high.
 Territory education is appreciable
 Reservation / expenditure or provision of services/
special provision like construction.
 All rights, legal measures
Strategies for advancement of
women contd..
 Post literacy
 Consolidate the basic literacy skills at speaking,
reading, and writing and problem solving at the
time.
 Sustain the learning environment
Strategies for advancement of
women contd…
 Continuing education
 Establishing a responsible and alternative
structure for life long learning, responding to the
needs of all sections of the society.
 Supports grass root community.
 Women learners educate their children.
Strategies for advancement of
women contd..
 Human rights education
 To take control of their circumstances
 Achieve their own goals, helping themselves,
enhance their quality of life
 Motivate them for lobbying / advocacy
Strategies for advancement of
women Contd..
Skills development
 Availing skills through institutions/external
sources.
Cultural emancipation
 Motivate powerless/exploited

 Poor/oppressed / marginalized/ unvoiced


always by women culture of silence by Paulo
Ferrier.
Strategies for advancement of
women contd..
 Political participation
 Slow process/ needs training
 Knowledge on advocacy & lobbying
 Knowledge on all development activities
Strategies for advancement of
women contd..
 Health education
 Health care / Nutrition
 Problems of early marriage
 Mother and child health care
 Small family norms
 Diseases / communicable and non communicable
diseases /
 RTI/STI/HIV and psychological issues
Strategies for advancement of
women contd..
 Capacity building
 SHGs approach / savings /credits / leadership /
accounting etc.
 Entrepreneurship development
 Achieve women advancement improving income
regularly
 Expand their decision making, acquire assets
Collaborators of Social advancement
of women
 NGO/ INGOs / NPOs
 SHGs / CBOs
 Policy makers
 Local leaders
 Information disseminators
 Health care providers
 Teachers
 Family members
A nation's progress and prosperity can be
judged by the way it treats its women folk

Men must recognize and accept the fact that


women are equal partners in life

THANK YOU

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