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Gender Gap
Gender Gap
The stakes are even higher now that the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) is
ravaging the world, as times of great crisis often put women on the front lines.
Women predominate in key roles as nurses, social workers, and caregivers.
They are also working as doctors and volunteers, and as political and
community leaders making critical decisions about how to address the public
health, social, and economic effects of the crisis. Women’s participation will
be vital to our success against this shared global threat.
Today, we tend to take it for granted that women can vote. But - with the
exception of a few frontrunners like New Zealand, Australia, and Finland -
universal suffrage became a reality only after World War I. Eventually, voting
rights for women were introduced into international law in 1948 by the United
Nations Commission on Human Rights.
Around the world, many national reforms have been enacted in recent years
to improve the status of women in the workplace, in marriage, and especially
to protect women from violence.
Yet, there is still a long way to go…
Despite this meaningful progress, important gender gaps remain. These vary
in scale from country to country and take different forms - from physical
violence and deprivations to unequal opportunities in work or political life.
Women are paid less, earning 77 cents to every dollar earned by a man, and
bear disproportionate responsibility for unpaid care and domestic work
(performing 76 percent of total hours of unpaid care work worldwide). In fact, if
women’s unpaid work were assigned a monetary value, one study of six
countries has suggested that it would constitute between 10 and 39 percent of
GDP.
Women are less likely than men to have access to financial institutions or to
have a bank account. Although women-owned enterprises represent more
than 30 percent of registered businesses worldwide, only 10 percent of
women entrepreneurs have the capital they need to grow their businesses.
Yet when girls are allowed to dream and realize their potential, we are all
better off…
To quote the famous early 20th century Armenian novelist and activist, Zabel
Yesayan, “a woman is not born into this world to be pleasing. A woman is
born to develop her mental, moral and physical abilities.”
Over the course of history, many women have embarked on a path of self-
realization to the benefit of our society. Some are famous, some less so, but
each contributed to advancing the world, whether by promoting human rights
and peace, forging ahead in science, or serving on the front lines to save
human lives and protect public health.
Marie Curie was the first woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize (twice!) - in
physics in 1903 for her work on radioactivity, and again in chemistry in 1911
for her study of the elements polonium and radium.
The first Chinese female Nobel laureate, Tu Youyou, received the 2015 Nobel
Prize in Physiology and Medicine for her discoveries in advancing treatment
for malaria, which have since saved millions of lives.
Katherine Hannan, responding to the Red Cross’s call for nurses, volunteered
just as the United States entered WWI and the Spanish flu began to ravage
the army and eventually the world. She quickly rose through the ranks to head
nurse and superintendent, overseeing 100 nurses.
Mother Teresa was awarded a Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her tireless
humanitarian work on behalf of the poor and ailing in Calcutta.
And, today, women are helping lead the battle against COVID-19: on March 7,
the Chinese authorities recognized 20 female medical workers for their
outstanding and heroic role in the country's fight against the coronavirus
outbreak.
Carolina Elliott, a local woman from Charlotte, North Carolina, in the United
States, is organizing food deliveries to help doctors and nurses get “through
grueling 12-hour shifts.” “Because when you’re busy in the hospital like
that,” she says, “you don’t have time to think about food.”
Shobha Luxmi is one of the doctors leading the fight against COVID-19 in
Pakistan. She heads an isolation ward for coronavirus patients at a Karachi
hospital, which receives 500 patients a day. “I have almost been working
round the clock. I just get a few hours of sleep, and even then I am thinking
about the hospital,” she recounts.
And we also look up to the many anonymous and silent female heroes around
the world who are caring for the growing number of sick people and helping
the vulnerable who have been affected by the current pandemic.