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Women: The World’s Greatest Untapped Resource
Photo by BabaSteve. Used under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License.
In the west, we’re spoiled. Women are an integral part of society, running board rooms, Fortune 500 companies, households, raising children; often doing everything (or more) that their male counterparts do. In much of the rest of the world this is not the case. If women in general aren’t abused and harassed, they are ignored throughout the greater parts of the societies in which they live. If you thought Hillary Clinton had it bad, just ask any woman living in ‘the developing world‘ and they’ll tell you some stories that would make you sick to your stomach.
Kiva fellow Taryn Goodman had this to say about her trip to Tororo, Uganda:
There’s a famous saying that goes: “Old woman,” a young woman asked, “what is the heaviest burden a woman has to bear?” The old woman answers, “Young woman, the heaviest burden a woman has to bear is to have no burden at all.”
Taryn illustrates a long standing but unfortunate trend. In most male dominated societies, women are often sidelined from participating in the workforce not because of lack of opportunity but because of the needs of the men and children around them. There are some real examples of what an untapped resource women truly are, especially when it comes to the IT industry…
I’ve heard that so much that it sounds like rhetoric. My girlfriend always says “nothing happens in a vaccum” so it’s rather silly to suggest that the only thing keeping them from embracing new opportunity is free will. There’s a larger problem in the insecurities and stubbornness of the status quo (men) to accept them.
More than 90 percent of the engineers who make Internet systems around the world are male. These are often highly lucrative positions that any trained worker could do. Studies like this one from Wired and this one from The Register often come to the same conclusions: “There aren’t enough Women in this field? Why? how can we attract more? Yet the industry remains as insular, male dominated and chauvinistic as it ever has.
Chauvinism is as old as humanity itself, and it’s a universal truth that is slowly relenting as women are empowered through technology and the increasing abundance of communication tools. Groups like the Global Peace Initiative of Women are taking great measures to have women included in discussions about the larger problems of humanity. That said, I don’t think the answer is to solely focus efforts on ‘empowering women’ (a cause CARE recently began championing), but rather I feel the best way to address this is through the education of everyone. Societies won’t change because you give women money and loans and make them the patriarchs of the family. If the culture doesn’t welcome it, those women will suffer in many other ways that are hard to fathom. The mentalities of entire communities need to be challenged and this can only be done in a mutually inclusive discussion.