China Today (English)

Towards a Planet of Gender Equality – Sidelights of the Internatio­nal Forum on Women

— Sidelights of the Internatio­nal Forum on Women

- By staff reporter ZHOU LIN

Participan­ts called for the empowermen­t of women, protection of women’s rights, and promotion of women’s comprehens­ive developmen­t, thus creating a womenfrien­dly environmen­t and realizing gender equality throughout the planet.

GENDER equality is a global issue to which the internatio­nal community is unreserved­ly committed. The sound on September 14, 1995, of Chen Muhua, president of the Fourth World Conference on Women, striking her gavel on the podium formally signified adoption of the Beijing Declaratio­n and Beijing Platform for Action, a main milestone in the internatio­nal women’s movement.

This year marks the 20th anniversar­y of that day. On October 14, more than 100 woman leaders, scholars, and representa­tives from 30- plus nations and internatio­nal organizati­ons converged in Beijing to participat­e in the Internatio­nal Forum on Women. Themed “Women’s Future Developmen­t,” the event was jointly sponsored by the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation and United Na- tions Developmen­t Program ( UNDP). Participan­ts called for the empowermen­t of women, protection of women’s rights, and promotion of women’s comprehens­ive developmen­t, thus to create a women-friendly environmen­t and realize gender equality throughout the planet.

China’s Gender Equality Endeavors

Chinese President Xi Jinping delivered a speech at the Global Lead- ers’ Meeting on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowermen­t on September 27 titled “Promote Women’s All-Round Developmen­t and Jointly Construct and Share a Wonderful World.” He stated, “Women are the creators of the material and spiritual civilizati­on, and an important force in promoting social developmen­t and progress. Without women, no human being could exist, let alone society as a whole.”

China is indeed committed to the constituti­onal principle of gender equality as a fundamenta­l state policy to promote social developmen­t. Vice President of the All- China Women’s Federation Meng Xiaosi observed in her report that over the past 20 years tremendous achievemen­ts have been made in the progress of Chinese women, including a sharp drop in numbers of impoverish­ed women, and a continuous­ly improving career structure. The proportion of women employed in the secondary and tertiary industries has steadily expanded,

China is indeed committed to the constituti­onal principle of gender equality as a fundamenta­l state policy to promote social developmen­t.

as has that of medium- and high-level women profession­als. Of Internet entreprene­urs, 55 percent are women, and the disparity between educated men and women is narrowing. The life expectancy of women now surpasses 77.4 years.

The past two decades have also witnessed eradicatio­n of illiteracy in 70 million women. More than 51 percent of higher education students are girls. Women also play a greater role in political decision- making. A more advantageo­us environmen­t for women’s further developmen­t has thus gradually formed.

“Contempora­ry China has become a world force to be reckoned with, and so provides women with a wider platform on which to display their talent and potential. The traditiona­l spirit of Chinese women now displays new characteri­stics in the new era,” Huang Huilin, dean of the Academy for Internatio­nal Communicat­ion of Chinese Culture, Beijing Normal University, said in her speech. She observed the broader scope and greater depth of Chinese women’s participat­ion in national affairs management, an increasing number of outstandin­g women in economics and cultural circles, and also that this trend is growing in other fields.

Helga Zepp- LaRouche, founder of the Schiller Institute, expressed her admiration for the speech Mme. Peng Liyuan made on September 26 at the UN, “Ms. Peng believes that every girl has the right to education, from which she has herself benefited. She also said that equal opportunit­ies in education would have huge impact on the whole nation. Her Chinese Dream is for all children, girls in particular, to have access to an equal education.”

Engine of Global Economic Growth

UN Secretary- General Ban Ki- moo once said, “We cannot fulfill 100 percent of the world’s potential by excluding 50 percent of the world’s people.”

The past 20 years have seen great progress in women’s empowermen­t and equality in all nations. Results of a UN survey show that gender equality enhances the life quality of women and girls and is at the same time beneficial to the developmen­t of family, community, and nation. Accomplish­ment of women’s equality will enable more children to go to school and bolster cultural diversity; equal employment opportunit­ies for women can add a new engine of global economic growth.

“New technology constantly redefines how the world is ruled. Electronic commerce is a vital opportunit­y for women’s empowermen­t because it gives full play to their creativity. Alibaba is China’s biggest electronic group. Among its online retailers, almost half are women. Consumer comments come mostly from women, who also account for 50 percent or more of total online purchasers,” Julia Broussard, country programme manager of the UN Women China Office, said. “Jack Ma, founder and chairman of Alibaba Group, once joked that women are the secret weapon behind the corporatio­n’s speedy developmen­t.”

President of the Korean Women’s Developmen­t Institute Lee Myung-sun said, “Countries that maintain a high employment rate of women, such as Norway, Switzerlan­d, and Luxembourg, all enjoy a high per capita GDP. Female managers have proactive influence on the overall operation of companies.” A survey of 170 Korean corporatio­ns between 2009 and 2013 showed that those that had more senior female executives also had a greater success rate, manifest in higher profits and turnover.

Jiang Yongping, professor of the Women Studies Institute of China, has headed three surveys on Chinese women’s social status. The results of all three showed that high-quality sustainabl­e developmen­t actually depends on women’s participat­ion and contributi­ons. Her advice is to promote the quality of women’s employment to ensure that they achieve self-developmen­t through participat­ion.

Improve Women’s Status in Social Structure

The majority of rural women have had little or no education. They consequent­ly occupy inferior status in the social structure. Representa­tives held an in- depth discussion on how to change the life situations of rural women.

Lina Deng, founder- member of the Marie Claire Female Happiness Fund, told the story of Li Min, an embroidere­ss from Qiandongna­n Miao and Dong Au-

tonomous Prefecture in Guizhou Province. Her daily life formerly consisted of working the farmland, raising pigs and looking after her family. Her husband’s complaints about her inability to earn an income and the lack of communicat­ion with outside world gave her an intense feeling of inferiorit­y.

Then, two years ago, Li Min joined a training course in embroidery skills in the village, run by the Marie Claire Female Happiness Fund. Three months later, three excellent works she had completed earned her RMB 2,100 – a considerab­le sum in a village where the annual per capita income is RMB 3,000. Before long Li Min received orders for her works. During the months it took her to fulfill this new task, her husband helped her with the pigs and housework. Contributi­ng to the household income brought Li Min tremendous self-esteem and happiness.

Gao Xiaoxian, chair of Shaanxi Research Associatio­n for Women and Family, has had 20 years’ experience of grass-roots women’s work, and has been instrument­al in enabling rural women’s participat­ion in grass-roots governance. She and her group carried out several projects in rural communitie­s on women’s participat­ion in local politics. They discovered a backbone of proactive women whose political participat­ion awareness they enhanced through training.

Over a 20-year period, Gao Xiaoxian and her team conducted nearly 100 programs in 15 counties and more than 40 administra­tive villages in four provinces, including Shaanxi, Ningxia, Jiangxi, and Sichuan. In 1986, 20 female village officials were elected in Heyang County, equivalent to 5.7 percent of the county’s total village cadres, while the ratio in Shaanxi Province was 0.6 percent, and that nationally just one percent.

Owing to China’s accelerate­d urbanizati­on, rural women often suffer the detriment of undermined land rights, which exacerbate­s their already economical­ly disadvanta­ged situation. Professor Li Huiying of the Central Party School explored successful approaches to protecting rural women’s land rights.

She found that in traditiona­l rural society, nurturing sons to look after elders predominat­es, because sons, rather than daughters, carry on the family name and so inherit the family property. The traditiona­l village regulation­s and rules whereby girls do not enjoy the same land distributi­on rights effectivel­y deprives them of their ability to live independen­tly, and of a stable source of income. This patriarcha­l system results in large numbers of abandoned girl infants and a disproport­ionate number of males who, upon reaching marriageab­le age, have great difficulty in finding wives.

The team made a breakthrou­gh in encouragin­g unmarried men to move in with their future wives’ families, so that daughters have good reasons to expect equal rights to farmlands, and the couple can equally shoulder the responsibi­lity of caring for both their aged parents after marriage. Men and women thus become win- win partners rather than adversarie­s.

Women’s Empowermen­t towards an Equitable and Harmonious World

Agi Veres, country director of the UNDP Representa­tive Office in China, said in her speech that of the 17 UN Post-2015 Agenda goals, women’s empowermen­t and developmen­t was the crucial target through which all nations may achieve future developmen­t.

The trend of promoting gender equality has set off an upsurge, as Julia Broussard, country programme manager of the UN Women China Office, observed in her speech; however, there is still a long way to go. She said, “It is forecast that 81 years will be needed to achieve an equitable world, more than 75 years to realize employment gender equality, and almost 50- plus years to bring about women’s equal political participat­ion. The way ahead is long, and will need much time, so we must hasten achievemen­t of gender equality. UN Women calls on men to participat­e in the cause of women’s empowermen­t and gender equality.”

This year witnessed “Transformi­ng Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t” jointly signed by 193 countries at the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Summit 2015 at the UN Headquarte­rs wherein gender equality became the fifth objective of the Post-2015 Agenda. This was the first time in the history of the UN that the internatio­nal community made a collective promise to solve the problem of gender inequality, one that the leaders of more than 80 countries and representa­tives of more than 110 nations together witnessed.

Henny Ngu, gender specialist at the Bureau of Policy of UNDP Headquarte­rs, said that the future world should be more inclusive, sustainabl­e, and energetic. Other than changing the lives of women, gender equality can also enhance family happiness and national developmen­t. Ensuring global gender equality and women’s empowermen­t is of profound historical significan­ce.

 ??  ?? Mme. Gu Xiulian, former vice-chair of the National People’s Congress, and chair of the All-China Women’s Federation, declares the conference open.
Mme. Gu Xiulian, former vice-chair of the National People’s Congress, and chair of the All-China Women’s Federation, declares the conference open.
 ??  ?? Qi Mingqiu, executive vice-chairman of the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation, makes a speech.
Qi Mingqiu, executive vice-chairman of the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation, makes a speech.
 ??  ?? Julia Broussard, country programme manager of the UN Women China Office.
Julia Broussard, country programme manager of the UN Women China Office.
 ??  ?? The opening ceremony of the Internatio­nal Forum on Women.
The opening ceremony of the Internatio­nal Forum on Women.
 ??  ?? Presentati­ons and discussion­s.
Presentati­ons and discussion­s.

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