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The Cultural Geography of Gender

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Presentation on theme: "The Cultural Geography of Gender"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Cultural Geography of Gender
Subtitle

2 Cultural Influences on Gender Roles
Cultural norms can control the advancement or subjugation of women and their status in certain regions of the world. Culture and society has an enormous impact on gender roles in America. Americans receive thousands of cultural messages each week concerning gender roles, including advertisements, movies, TV, music, magazines, and family influence. People evaluate these messages to understand expectations for their gender and how they should operate within society. While many people and organizations challenge these traditional gender roles, the influence of main stream culture remains evident.

3 Transgender Trans people are still viewed in some cultures as social pariahs with a glaring otherness hanging about them. The way in which we view gender has been very rigid and inflexible. According to many, this is very oppressive. Gender roles often limit the activities of men and women, who don’t want to be perceived as effeminate or masculine for performing certain tasks. Ex. Boys too often grow into hard men who have walled themselves off and expelled the notion of vulnerability because they do not want to be seen as weak or effeminate. Ex. Girls, meanwhile, will grow into women afraid to voice their opinions or beliefs because they do not want to be perceived as domineering. Today, society is now advocating the careful consideration of gender and gender roles in their current form. By changing the way we see gender, we are eliminating the above notions. Does gender even matter anymore?

4 Gender and Development
The development of a culture/society is closely tied to how they view women. In developed countries, the role of the woman in society has changed. We use several measurements concerning gender in determining how developed a culture/society/country actually is. It all goes back to how they treat women. Other, more advanced societies who have advanced the status of women in society, are now considering the elimination of gender as a determinant within culture. How do less developed countries view transgender?

5 Development by Gender: How is it measured?
Gender Inequality Index (GII) Gender Development Index (GDI) Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM) Child Marriage (CM) Who creates these???— United Nations Human Development

6 GDI indicators

7 Gender Related Development Index (GDI)
Economic, Social, and Demographic indicators GDI same statistics to HDI but separates men and women Income GNI (ECON/standard of living), expected # of schooling years (SOCIAL/knowledge), # of school years (SOCIAL/knowledge), & life expectancy (DEMOGRAPHIC/healthy life) Country penalized for having disparities (differences) between men and women (ex: school enrollment)

8 Developed—0.975 Developing: 0.904

9 Gender Inequality Index (GII)
GII-major barrier to development; no one society has gained gender equity Women and girls are discriminated in health, education, political representation and participation in the labor market Measures Reproductive health, measured by maternal mortality rates and birth rates Empowerment-access to jobs, education, rights (equality) Economic status

10 Gender Inequality Index (GII)
Measures the gender gap in level of achievement in 3 dimensions Health, empowerment, and labor market The higher the GII the greater the inequality gap Score of 0 would mean equality, score of 1.0 is bad Reproductive health is largest contributor to gender inequality in developing regions U.S. GII and Canada is .136: which has greater gender inequality?

11 GII Indicators

12 GII 0=0% Gender Inequality/1=100% Gender Inequality
Highest GII Scores-1) Switzerland .040, 2) Denmark .041, 3) Netherlands .044 United States ranked #43 (score of .203)

13 Gender Inequality Index (GII)
HEALTH Poor reproductive health is a MAJOR contributor to gender inequality (UN MDG’s?) Maternal mortality rate: number of women who die giving birth per 100,000 births Developed: 16 deaths…developing: 171 deaths  Highest SS Africa Adolescent fertility rate: number of births per women aged 15 to 19 15 in developed…53 in developing Where gender inequality is highest, contraceptive (birth control) use if low

14 Gender Inequality Index (GII)
Empowerment Measured by number of seats held by women in legislature (make laws) and number of women who have completed some secondary school Men hold majority of political power in all countries of the world Why does this matter?

15 -Highest % are in Europe -Lowest % in SW Asia and N
-Highest % are in Europe -Lowest % in SW Asia and N. Africa -US (2015): 20 of 100 Senators & 84 of 435 in House are women

16 Gender Inequality Index
Empowerment Secondary School Worldwide 54% of women have completed SOME secondary school (high school) compared to 64% of men In N. America, girls are more likely to complete HS! Developing countries, boys are MUCH more likely to graduate HS…South Asia is the worst.

17 Gender Inequality Index
Labor Market Female labor force participation rate—% of women holding full-time jobs outside the home World: women - 51%...men – 77% Women in developed are more likely to hold full time job than developing world but figures vary widely. East Asia and SS Africa: gap is smaller as women hold jobs in agriculture and service industries even though that have highest fertility rates

18 Gender Empowerment Measure How is it measured?
The GEM demonstrates the ability of women to participate and determine the power structure of a country 2 Economic indicators: -% of women in professional and technical jobs -income level 2 Political indicators: -% of women in admin or managerial jobs -% of women holding elected positions

19 Gender Empowerment Measure

20 Gender Empowerment Measure

21

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23 What are the indicators?
Gender Development Index (GDI) Gender Inequality Index (GII) Health Maternal mortality Adolescent fertility Empowerment # of women in legislature Secondary school Labor market Women in work force full time job Econ (standard of living) GNI Social (knowledge) Expected years of school Mean years of school Demographic (healthy life) Life expectancy

24 Women in Sub-Saharan Africa
Populate much of the rural areas, as men migrate to cites to work Produce 70% of the regions food Small % of women have legal title to their land

25 Child Marriage

26 Prevalence of Child Marriage – Top 20 Countries

27 Child Marriage (CM): Constraints to Health & Development
Outcomes of Child Marriage Maternal mortality Maternal morbidities Low birth weight & prematurity Infant mortality Reasons for Outcomes Still growing First birth Inadequate prenatal care Low socioeconomic status Worse reproductive health outcomes Wasted investment in development efforts At a societal level, child marriage constrains health and devt Get numbers for first point

28 Dowry Deaths Dowry Deaths-refers the deaths of young women who are murdered or driven to suicide by continuous harassment and torture by husbands and in-laws in an effort to extort an increased dowry. Dowry death is considered one of the many categories of violence against women, alongside rape, bride burning and acid throwing. It is widespread in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and some regions of Africa. Pakistan has the highest reported rates of dowry-related deaths per 100,000 women in the world. In India, alone, there were 8,233 dowry deaths in 2012.

29 Why Does Child Marriage Persist?
Gender roles Families see girls as financial and social burdens Lack of socially acceptable alternatives for girls Family and community honor tied to early marriage Reinforce ties between families and communities Desire to protect girls Lack of political will Cultural norm If there are laws, and if the world is aware of the extent of the problem, then why does it persist?

30 Top 10 Countries Where It’s the Worst to be a Woman
India-68% of women suffer from domestic violence, possibility of dowry death Yemen-GII Score of .78, high rate of child marriage, female literacy rate of 35%, women make 30% of man’s income Iraq-no women in political office, significant drop in women in the workforce Pakistan-2nd to last for economic participation for women Nepal-higher life expectancy for men, 25% of women enrolled in higher education Peru-61% of women are victims of abuse Turkey-29% of women are employed, #1 in women working unpaid hours Sudan-women imprisoned, possibly executed for converting to Christianity Afghanistan-women imprisoned for leaving husbands Dem. Rep. of the Congo-rape and sexual assault are commonplace as soldiers use force to rule What about the U.S.? U.S. is only core country without national paid family and medical leave. 1 in 4 women return to work within 2 weeks of giving birth. Leads to possible decline in CBR. The Family Medical Leave Act guarantees 12 weeks of maternity leave, no pay guarantee. Trump calling for mothers who are not given paid maternity leave to receive 6 weeks of unemployment benefits paid for by the government.

31 Conclusions -Just like the HDI, the GII and GEM divide countries into high, medium, and low areas of development. --Gender inequality in income, education, and political power is a global problem.


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