Tag: gender

The morality of gender inequality

One of the paradoxes and indeed great moral hypocricies of the recent past is how womenare at one and the same time revered for qualities such as elegance, motherhood, intuition, creativity and much more, and consistently subjected to abhorrent prejudices, injustices, and crimes. Most religions associate the act of creation itself as being feminine – so we get constant references to Mother Nature and Mother Earth – yet the experiences of so many women in the world is one of subjugation, suffering and hardship, simply because they are women.

Sheryl WuDunn makes the point powerfully in her talk for TED which summarises the main theses of her book, Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide:  as she says, ‘the central moral challenge of this century is gender inequity’.

 

Many of the arguments concerning gender (in)justice revolve around the question of equality. Yet, it seems plain to me that in factual terms, we are more unequal than equal – the differences between us define who we are as much as the similarities we might share. Indeed the similarities are just that, similarities, not ‘equalities’.  So how might we argue for equality, given this starting point? As we will see when we discuss utilitarianism, there might be an answer from Jeremy Bentham who said: ‘Each to count for one and none for more than one’ and which Peter Singer turns into a maxim of equal consideration of interests.

If we accept the view, how then can we engage a culture in such a way that it might become a reality for the millions of women who daily face the inequalities of being women? Reducing poverty, working to support a rights framework, and education are the solutions offered by Sheryl WuDunn. So far, such solutions have given scant results. What more might be needed? How can equal consideration of interests be practically promoted?

Gender Differences in blogging

Gender Differences in blogging

Blackwell Synergy – J Comp Mediated Comm, Volume 12 Issue 4 Page 1472-1492, July 2007 (Full Text)

This article asks whether blogging in the United Kingdom, which started later than in the United States, reproduces the gender differences in blogging behavior and the gender inequalities in recognition that have been observed in studies based largely on U.S. bloggers. A sample of 48 female and male British bloggers answered a questionnaire about their blogging practices and attitudes; data were also collected from their blogs and by means of online tools. For both sexes, blogging is mainly a leisure activity, and men and women find the same range of satisfactions in blogging. However, more women use blogging as an outlet for creative work, whether as a hobby or as a livelihood. The results support several reasons advanced in previous research for the lower public profile of women bloggers.

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