The Jerusalem Post

Discrimina­tion against women lecturers

- • By FRANCES RADAY The writer is president of the Concord Research Center for Integratio­n of Internatio­nal Law in Israel and a member of the steering committee of Zulat for Equality and Human Rights.

The High Court of Justice has finally given its judgment, after 3 years, in the petitions on sex segregatio­n in universiti­es and colleges. The Concord Center which I direct presented an amicus opinion on internatio­nal human rights law, which gained considerab­le attention in the hearings.

The court decided unanimousl­y that exclusion of women lecturers from teaching the male classes is no longer to be allowed. This decision was almost unavoidabl­e in view of the Equal Employment Opportunit­ies Law which prohibits discrimina­tion on the basis of sex in employment conditions. The point is driven home by the cynical asymmetric­al practice to date excluding women lecturers from male classes but allowing male lecturers to teach female classes.

The majority decision neverthele­ss allows the continuati­on of the sex segregated classes themselves for haredi students and to those ever-extending groups who qualify to go into the haredi programs. In a minority opinion, Justices Uzi Vogelman and Anat Baron held that the entire project of sex segregatio­n in higher education was illegitima­te.

May I add that Vogelman specifical­ly asked me during the hearing whether we would regard the mere prohibitio­n of excluding female lecturers as adequate and I responded decisively in the negative, referring to the authoritie­s in our internatio­nal human rights brief which categorica­lly insist that the eliminatio­n of stereotype­s is an integral part of the prohibitio­n of discrimina­tion against women. Indeed, both minority decisions linked their decisions to our claim that sex segregatio­n entrenches gender stereotype­s.

Some liberal voices are praising the majority decision as a wise compromise. It is not a compromise but a surrender. The only praise from liberals should be going to the minority opinions of Vogelman and Baron. It is not in any way enough to merely end the employment discrimina­tion against female lecturers.

The surrender to the demand for sex segregatio­n by male students who come from a patriarcha­l culture is devastatin­g as a model for Israeli society, especially when it is instituted in the universiti­es and colleges which are supposed to represent the center of rationalit­y. Israel in this move has followed the commandmen­ts of the more extremist leaders in Iran, where there have been opposing camps on the issue of sex segregatio­n for Iranian campuses.

 ??  ?? STUDENTS AT the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem earlier this year. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)
STUDENTS AT the Mount Scopus campus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem earlier this year. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)
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