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Isn’t this awfully 1970s?
• Theoretical arguments
• Empirical evidence
• Strategic and tactical considerations
December 2006: Canadian women are “equal”
Minister Bev Oda removes “equality” from the mandate of Status of Women
Closes most Status of Women offices
Stops all spending on women's rights advocacy
Helping women’s organizations
participate in the public policy
process
Increasing public understanding of women’s equality
issues
Pierre Polievre (Nepean–Carleton, CPC): “We would take those same child care dollars that this government would give to a babysitting bureaucracy and we would give it to parents directly.”
Dismantling & Delegitimizing
• Undoing decades of feminist (and social justice) activism that had begun to change structures of power
• Women begin to disappear from political view
Gender Injustices in Canada • UN Gender Disparity Index– Canada ranked 20th
• World Economic Forum Gender Gap Index– 2004: Canada ranked 4th
– 2012: Canada ranked 21st
• behind the Philippines, Latvia, Cuba and Nicaragua
Gender Injustice
Women are far more likely than men to:
•lose time at work because of personal or family responsibilities;
•work less or part-time, and to earn less;
•live below the poverty line;
•be a single-parent head of a family with young children;
Women are second-class economic citizens• In 2008, women earned, on average, 83 cents to
every dollar earned by men (an increase of 8¢ since 1988.)
Women are victimized
• 87% of victims of sexual assault are women
• 80% of the victims of “other sexual violations” are women
Women die from inequality• In 2009 women were almost three times more likely
than men to be killed by a spouse;
• Aboriginal women are 5-7 times more likely than other women to die of violence
• In 2001, the estimated life expectancy at birth for an Aboriginal girl was 76.8 years, compared to a non-Aboriginal girl who could expect to live to be 82
• The Native Women's Association of Canada has documented more than 580 cases of murdered and missing women.
Sexism in taxation
• Working income tax credits privilege the male-breadwinner family,– Reflects the Canadian government’s “Failure to take its
commitments to the female half of the population seriously.”
What are we waiting for?
• Pay equity, employment equity and education equity;
• Police and justice policies to keep women and girls safe and alive;
• Public policies to support work-family reconciliation;
• Childcare
Mobilizing gender justice
• Women need childcare– Claims-making in the name of women’s needs is
disruptive
Strategic & tactical considerations
• Some kinds of needs can’t be met by the private market – they require public provision and public solutions.
• Not only can’t the market help solve the childcare problem, it is market relations that caused the childcare crisis in the first place.