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Gender Inequality

Gender Inequality. Sociology 125 November 2, 2010. Films: November 3. Tulia, Texas. http://www.tuliatexasfilm.com/

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Gender Inequality

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  1. Gender Inequality Sociology 125 November 2, 2010

  2. Films: November 3 Tulia, Texas http://www.tuliatexasfilm.com/ The film documents an important episode from the late 1990s and early 2000s in the complicated racial history of Texas. The episode made the news a few years ago and quickly faded from our collective memory. The filmmakers present a balanced, if critical, view of the events in a small town in the Texas panhandle and what happened when a rouge undercover cop arrested 46 people - 39 of whom were African-Americans. The 46 people were charged with selling drugs based solely on the evidence of the single undercover cop. While filmmakers clearly side with the victims, they let the sheriff and the undercover cop speak and they weave together the different voices in the town to present the narrative of the events fairly and honestly. The connections between the fear of drugs and racial prejudices are self-evident. Freedom on My Mind http://newsreel.org/nav/title.asp?tc=CN0037 This powerful documentary chronicles the Mississippi Voter Registration Project during the Civil Rights movement of the early 1960s. Archival footage and contemporary interviews explore early efforts to register disenfranchised blacks, the Freedom Summer drive and the formation of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. Freedom on My Mind garnered a Best Documentary Oscar nomination and won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.

  3. Killing us Softly Growing Up Female November 1 & 2 http://www.mediaed.org/cgi-bin/commerce.cgi?preadd=action&key=241 In this new, highly anticipated update of her pioneering Killing Us Softly series, the first in more than a decade, Jean Kilbourne takes a fresh look at how advertising traffics in distorted and destructive ideals of femininity. The film marshals a range of new print and television advertisements to lay bare a stunning pattern of damaging gender stereotypes -- images and messages that too often reinforce unrealistic, and unhealthy, perceptions of beauty, perfection, and sexuality. By bringing Kilbourne's groundbreaking analysis up to date, Killing Us Softly 4 stands to challenge a new generation of students to take advertising seriously, and to think critically about popular culture and its relationship to sexism, eating disorders, and gender violence. http://www.newday.com/films/Growing_Up_Female.html Growing Up Female is one of the first films of the modern women's movement. Produced in 1971, it caused controversy and exhilaration. It was widely used by consciousness-raising groups to generate interest and help explain feminism to a skeptical society. The film looks at female socialization through a personal look into the lives of six women, age 4 to 35, and the forces that shape them--teachers, counselors, advertising, music and the institution of marriage. It offers us a chance to see how much has changed--and how much remains the same. Purchased by more than 400 universities and libraries.   Boys Will be Men http://www.bullfrogfilms.com/catalog/boys.html Boys are in trouble. The spate of school shootings in 1998 and 1999 amplified a warning being sounded by social scientists. After 20 years of concern over the status of girls raised by the women's movement, some experts say it is boys we need to turn our attention to. There are disturbing statistics to back this up. Four boys are diagnosed as emotionally disturbed for every one girl. Six boys are diagnosed with attention deficit disorder for every one girl. Boys kill themselves five times more often than girls. Boys are four times more likely to drop out of high school than girls are. Girls now outnumber boys entering college.  How do boys become men? How do they learn courage, the difference between right and wrong, and the meaning of love? What hurts them, makes them violent, and sometimes kills them? Boys Will Be Men, a documentary film about growing up male in America, seeks answers to these questions.

  4. Sex and Gender • Sex: a biological distinction based on roles in the process of biological reproduction • Gender: a social distinction between roles and expectations linked to sex. • Gender is the social transformation of a biological difference, sex, into a social difference. • Gender norms are the rules of appropriate behavior and roles for men and women.

  5. Justice An inequality is unjust when: • the inequality is unfair, and • something could in principle be done to eliminate the unfairness. Social injustices persist because of power inequalities and the unwillingness of those with power to make changes

  6. What is Natural? • Biology and society: • Natural does not necessarily equal desirable or unchangeable • Egalitarian gender relations = equal power and autonomy • But not necessarily identical social roles • For instance, equality might mean equal amounts of leisure time. Is It possible to have a society within which deeply egalitarian gender relations predominate?

  7. What is Natural? I. Existing distribution of caregiving in a world with strong gender norms Gender gap in caregiving # of people Men Women Low High High Low The intensity of caregiving behavior (hours/week dedicated to child care)

  8. What is Natural? I. Existing distribution of caregiving in a world with strong gender norms II. Hypothetical distributions of caregiving in a world with weak gender norms Gender gap in caregiving Gender gap in caregiving Women Men Men Women Low High Low High The intensity of caregiving behavior The intensity of caregiving behavior

  9. Massive Transformation in Gender Relations • Legal Rights • Labor Force Participation • Occupation Structure and Earnings • Political power • Transformation in Family Structure • Domestic Division of Labor • Sexuality

  10. Legal Rights gained by women • Right to vote (1920; 19th Amendment) • Right to own passport (early 1930s) • Equal right to divorce (gradually since 1940s) • Reproductive rights (1973) • Equal rights to university admission (1960s) • Equal rights to all jobs and equal pay (1960s) • Equal rights to participate in sports (1972)

  11. Paid Work: the new cultural norm

  12. Labor Force Participation Rates of Married Women with Children, 1950-2007

  13. Occupational Structure and Earnings

  14. % Enrollments in Medical & Law Schools who are women, 1949-2007

  15. Some jobs remain highly gendered

  16. Men’s and Women’s median wages, 1973-2004 Women’s wages = 63% of men’s wages Women’s wages = 82% of men’s wages

  17. Occupational Structure and Earnings http://www.clevelandfed.org/research/trends/2007/1207/01ecoact.cfm

  18. http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/01/business/20090301_WageGap.html?8dpchttp://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/01/business/20090301_WageGap.html?8dpc

  19. Educational Attainment

  20. Educational Earnings Gap • In 2001, women with a Doctorate earned 75% of what men with identical educational attainment earned

  21. What Explains the Gender Pay Gap? • Today, human capital differences (education, workplace experience), as well as race (another pay gap), explain less of the wage gap. • Unexplained pay gap is between 9 and 17%. Is this the result of discrimination? • Aggregate data don’t say conclusively  audit studies are suggestive of discrimination • Reflect earnings between gendered jobs: stereotypical women’s jobs pay less on average. • Discrimination alters incentives: who should drop out of the labor market at childbirth? • if her expected earnings are lower, perhaps the woman. If so, this would exacerbate the pay gap but in a way not easily detected as discrimination

  22. % of corporate officers and CEOs who are women

  23. Women elected officials, 1979-2009

  24. Women in national legislatures, 2009 (%)

  25. Political and Economic Power

  26. Transformation of Family Structure: Heterogeneous families • Probability of divorce has increased from 12% (1950’s) to ~50% (2002) • Average age of first marriage delayed (26 for women, 27 for men)

  27. % of Households that consist of a Married Couple

  28. % of Households that consist of a Single Person living alone

  29. % of Women ages 30-34 who have Never Married, 1940-2000

  30. Probability of first marriage disruption within 10 years by marriagecohort and race/ethnicity: marriages begun 1954-1984

  31. Domestic Division of Labor

  32. Decision making in the household • A Pew Research Center survey (2008) asked men and women living in couples which one generally makes the decisions in four familiar areas of domestic life: • Who decides what you do together on the weekend? Who manages the household finances? Who makes the decisions on big purchases for the home? And who most often decides what to watch on television?

  33. mothers fathers Time devoted by Mothers and Fathers to routine housecleaning

  34. Men have taken on modestly more amounts of domestic labor • Women’s domestic labor has declined modestly overall, while simultaneously joining the paid labor force

  35. Sexuality • Sexuality and gender relations: • Sexuality is governed by rules and norms • Policing rules about sexuality impacts gender equality • rules change over time and have been impacted by birth control, social movements, and formal laws • Control over sexuality and unequal power relations • Sexual Violence • Laws and norms around sexual harassment • De-criminalization and partial de-stigmatization of homosexuality

  36. Sexual Violence

  37. http://articles.sfgate.com/2006-09-04/news/17310748_1_sexual-harassment-harassment-cases-harassment-claimshttp://articles.sfgate.com/2006-09-04/news/17310748_1_sexual-harassment-harassment-cases-harassment-claims

  38. Summary • Significant erosion of male domination and substantial increases in autonomy and self-determination for women • Gender inequality remains What explains the transformation of gender relations?

  39. Explaining Changes in Gender Relations • Women have always tried to increase their autonomy and reduce their subjection. But throughout most of history these struggles have produced at best minimal change. • Why do these struggles produce big changes sometimes and not others? Why in second half of the 20th century was there such massive transformation?

  40. The general answer While women have tried throughout history to increase their autonomy and reduce their subordination, they could only succeed in doing this on a large scale once social conditions had changed in ways that made existing gender power relations fragile.

  41. Three basic processes • Decline in a coherent interest among men to defend male domination • Erosion of institutional system of female domesticity which eroded women’s interest in traditional gender relations • Increase in capacity for challenge by women

  42. The decline of coherent male interests in male domination • Central explanation: The rapidly increasing economic demand for literate labor by male employers

  43. Crisis of female domesticity • Stable marriage/personal relations fostered domesticity • blocked work opportunities increased the attractiveness of domesticity • A family wage made domesticity economically feasible • dense social networks supported domesticity (neighbors, churches, communities, etc.) • cultural norms and sexism reinforced identities and expectations

  44. Collapse of the system of coherent domesticity beginning in the 1960s • decline of stable marriage means women cannot count of support of husbands • expansion of work opportunities increased the viability of alternatives to domesticity • decline of the family wage made domesticity economically difficult  decline of unions and de-regulation of labor markets • erosion of dense social networks makes domesticity more isolated and difficult • challenge to cultural norms and traditional sexism contributes to new identities

  45. increasing abilities of women to struggle against oppression Members of the Political Equality League stump for women’s suffrage in Milwaukee in an early Ford (~1911-12)

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