Category Archives: Feminism

Feminism

Older mothers: Indeed

Dr Paulson said opposition to older mothers rests not on evidence that they make poor parents, but on prejudice. “Society still has these feelings about motherhood. The way we view the mother is much more circumscribed than for the father: she should be young and attractive. That is underneath all this talk about the ethics and legality of treating older women. Deep down, society has a fixed idea of what motherhood should be, and this causes deep discomfort.”

From a Times piece about a study that found mothers in their 50s have no more troubles coping than those in their 30s and 40s.

Feminism

Pay the dinner ladies like the labourers

It could multiply their pay five times. As a result of a deal with the unions 15 years ago, dinner ladies are earning as little as 20 per cent of what men doing similar unskilled/semi-skilled jobs receive.

One of those cases where you have to ask just what unions and managers thought they were doing…

Feminism History Science

The new, the old and the surprising…

Europe’s first new mammal to be discovered in 150 years is Mus cypriacus, or if you’re being familiar the Cypriot mouse. Of course people knew that they were there, but not that it was a separate species – a reminder of how little we still know about the natural world, even in the most-studied region of it.

A rather delicious little piece of historical irony – a group of Maori are claiming British pensions (which give the comparative level of the NZ dollar versus sterling would come in very handy).

The claim is based on the 1840 Treaty of Waitangi, the document that handed sovereignty over New Zealand to Britain, ruled at the time by Queen Victoria.
Article Three of the treaty guarantees Maori “the same rights and privileges as British subjects.”

You might call it the price of empire.

Then a surprising (if perhaps only temporary – due to share prices) fact out of China – the richest person there, topping the list of billionaires, is a woman.

Ms Zhang, the 49-year-old founder of Nine Dragons Paper, which buys scrap paper from the United States for use in China, shot from 36th to pole position in the annual China Rich List compiled by Hurun Report, the luxury publishing and events group, making her the first woman ever to top the Rich List.
“She is the wealthiest self-made woman in the world,” said Rupert Hoogewerf, a researcher who has been compiling the rich list for seven years. Her fortune trumps that of US chat show queen Oprah Winfrey and the Harry Potter creator J K Rowling. Her wealth was estimated at £202m last year, but the share price of Nine Dragons has tripled since she listed her company on the Hong Kong stock exchange and the market for recycled products is growing at a furious pace.
The previous incumbent, Huang Guangyu of China’s biggest electronics retailer, Gome, has been knocked into second place, with his personal wealth thought to be £1.3bn.

Feminism

One thing women have taken to heart

I was having a conversation at work today with a staff member who had just announced she was leaving to follow her husband/partner to a new city. Without even giving it serious thought I asked her anxiously if she would be able to work there. (She will be able to.)

I was amused, but rather pleased, to shortly after hear another female staff member have exactly the same conversation, in the same tone.

Sometimes it is easy to focus on many ways feminism has apparently not impacted on many women’s lives, but the importance of being able to earn your own living, of not being financially dependant on a man, has really sunk in.

Feminism

A small sign of progress in Saudi Arabia

An attempt to ban a relatively honest and liberal novel about the lives of young women in the Saudi capital, Banat al-Riyadh (“The Girls of Riyadh”) has failed.

There are some interesting comparisons in this piece and the comments between Fifties/Sixties Britain and Saudi Arabia. Now who has their proper, respectable hat on?

Feminism

Well done Mr Bush

That Iraqi women are now having an extremely tough time is hardly new news, but a piece in the Observer today contains some new tales of horror, and an overall picture of the Talibanisation of the country…

It is not only the religious militias that have turned women’s lives into a living hell – it is, in some measure, the government itself, which has allowed ministries run by religious parties to segregate staff by gender. Some public offices, including ministries, insist on women staff wearing a headscarf at all times. A women’s shelter, set up by Yanar Mohammed’s group, was closed down by the government.
Most serious of all are the death threats women receive for simply working, even in government offices. Zainub – not her real name – works for a ministry in Baghdad. One morning, she said, she arrived at work to find that a letter had been sent to all the women. ‘When I opened up the note it said, “You will die. You will die”.’
The situation has been exacerbated by the undermining of Iraq’s old Family Code, established in 1958, which guaranteed women a large measure of equality in key areas such as divorce and inheritance. The new constitution has allowed the Family Code to be superseded by the power of the clerics and new religious courts, with the result that it is largely discriminatory against women.