While some countries have made great strides in recent decades toward gender equality, we still have a long way to go before reaching true parity. International Women’s Day is Tuesday, March 8, and the theme this year is #PledgeForParity.
“Worldwide, women continue to contribute to social, economic, cultural and political achievement,” the International Women’s Day website proclaims. “And we have much to celebrate today. But progress towards gender parity has slowed in many places.”
We’d like to pass on this article from The Independent, with five striking graphic representations of areas that still need a lot of work to reach equality, safety, and happiness of all.
independent.co.uk – Women still earn less than men across all sectors and occupations, hold just a fifth of global parliamentary seats and face an estimated 118-year wait for the gender pay gap to finally close.
Those are some of the startling statistics showing how desperately initiatives to improve education, health and quality of life asInternational Women’s Day approaches.
Sexual abuse
More than a third of women worldwide have experienced physical or sexual violence at some point in their lives.
The most common form is domestic violence or attacks by current or previous partners, which occur most frequently between a woman’s teenage years and menopause.
Additionally, at least 46 countries have no laws protecting women against domestic violence and many nations that do enforce them poorly.
Child sex abuse
An estimated 120 million girls and women under age 20 have been subjected to forced sexual intercourse or other forced sexual acts – around 10 per cent.
A Unicef report found that the violence was a “global reality” across all countries and social groups that could include harassment, rape or sexual exploitation in prostitution or pornography.
Read the rest here.