Title Image

Blog

Will The Next Decade Belong To Women?

  |   Leadership


“Now women, I just want you to know; you are not perfect, but what I can say pretty indisputably is that you’re better than us (men),” Barack Obama said while speaking at the Singapore Expo on December 16, 2019. “I’m absolutely confident that for two years, if every nation on Earth was run by women, you would see a significant improvement across the board on just about everything … living standards and outcomes.”


I have been keen to explore the rise of feminism at a time when we have witnessed many dramatic changes in the rise of women in our society. Finland has just sworn in a 15-member cabinet of which 10 are women with 34-year-old Sanna Marin as the worldā€™s youngest Prime Minister. The 116
thĀ US Congress saw a record 102 women (23.4% of the Chamberā€™s voting members) and Nancy Pelosi as the Speaker of the House of Representatives. Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardenā€™s very feminine response when 50 Muslims were killed in two mosques in March 2019 won universal praise; while the hope for climate change has been driven by 16-year-old Greta Thunberg, the TIME Person of the Year.


In a first in the history of Indian sports, all nine athletes nominated by the Sports Ministry for Padma Awards are women. And a recent Harvard case study by Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman shows that ā€œwomen score higher than men in most leadership skillsā€. SAPā€™s Jennifer Morgan became the first women to lead a DAX company after being named as co-CEO. It may all sound remarkable, but there will come a day when it may not. While a lot still needs to be done, feminism has come a long way since the term was coined in 1837.


Charles Fourier, aĀ utopian socialistĀ and French philosopher, is credited with having coined the word “fĆ©minisme” in 1837. The word (in translation) first appeared inĀ FranceĀ and theĀ NetherlandsĀ in 1872,Ā Great BritainĀ in the 1890s, and theĀ United StatesĀ in 1910.Ā FeminismĀ is a range ofĀ social movements,Ā political movements, andĀ ideologiesĀ that share a common goal: to define, establish, and achieve the political, economic, personal, and socialĀ equality of the sexes.


Most people today fail to fully understand the ideology/theory of feminism. It has been described as emerging in three waves.Ā The first wave of the feminist movementĀ started in the mid-19th Century and culminated with the women’s suffrage movement that led to women gaining the right to vote. One of the earliest feminist works,Ā A Vindication of the Rights of WomanĀ by Mary Wollstonecraft, was published in 1792. She was working on a second volume when she died.


In the 1940s, women gained increasing employment as men left overseas to fight in World War II. At the end of the war, however, women were forced out of the workplace. This gave rise to the second wave in the 1950s, and the books that ignited it were notably French author and existentialist Simone de Beauvoirā€™sĀ The Second SexĀ and US author Betty Friedanā€™sĀ The Feminine Mystique. Criticism grew that the movement had focused on white women to the exclusion of everyone else, and the second wave essentially ended in the 1980s with the failure to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment.


The third wave emerged in the mid-1990s. It was led by so-calledĀ Generation XersĀ who, born in the 1960s and ā€™70s in the developed world, came of age in a media-saturated and culturally and economicallyĀ diverseĀ milieu and were influenced by the postmodernist movement. Although they benefited significantly from the achievements of the earlier feminists, they alsoĀ critiquedĀ their positions. The concept of aĀ ā€˜gender continuumā€™ emerged.


Although debated by some, many claim that a fourth wave of feminism began about 2012, with a focus onĀ sexual harassment, body shaming, andĀ rapeĀ culture. It was driven by the use of social media. The brutal gang-rape and murder of a young woman in India in December 2012 sparked national and international outrage, whileĀ Donald Trumpā€™s inflammatory remarks about women provoked the historic Womenā€™ March in which 4.6 million participated across the US the day after he was elected president. This was followed by the #MeToo campaign, starting with allegations of film mogulĀ Harvey Weinsteinā€™s history of sexual harassment of women in the industry, and spreading across the globe to bring condemnation to dozens of powerful men in politics, business, entertainment, and the news media.


The only reason women have not had a better representation across all sections of society is because of institutional and systemic bias. At the same time, the fact that we have come so far in so little time is a marvel. And thatā€™s thanks to the feminist movement. Hereā€™s hoping that the next decade will belong to the women. And every man should be cheering for that.


As my actress friend Nandita Das would say, ā€œEvery conscientious man should be a feminist.ā€



Copy link
Powered by Social Snap