#1 - JRL 2007-56 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
March 8, 2007
Russian women: breadwinners at home, outcasts in
politics
MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti commentator Olga Sobolevskaya) - As Russian women accept
congratulations on the International Women's Day, 8th of March, they often think
to themselves that although the Constitution grants equal rights to women and
men, in real life their opportunities are very unequal.
Not many women in Russia are feminists - they tend to lean towards
patriarchal views and way of life. But life itself compels them to reproach men.
Sociologists talk about "gender asymmetry" with good reason. On average, women
earn only 70% of men's salaries, and get 40%-50% of their pensions. For a long
time, they have been doomed to low-paid spheres - healthcare, education and
culture. It is no surprise that women working two or three jobs at the same time
has become a typically Russian phenomenon.
Women are more flexible than men on the jobs market; they are keener on
getting new qualifications, and are better at dealing with challenges. In the
estimate of the Romir Monitoring research holding, 43% of women are interested
in their careers as compared with 54% of men. As a result, more than half of
managers at different levels are women, concludes President of the Russian
Business Academy Irina Gorbulina. But Russian women are well aware of the "glass
ceiling" - an artificial career limit on the grounds of sex, says Vice President
of Mediasoyuz Yelena Zelinskaya.
She believes that women's participation in politics is "barely visible under
the microscope." Valentina Matviyenko, the current governor of St. Petersburg,
and Galina Karelova supervised the ministries in charge of social issues in the
early 21st century. But they have been the most brilliant women in the
government in recent times. Russia ranks 80th in the world in the ratio of
female members of the parliament's lower chamber (10%). Women occupy a meager
five percent of seats in the upper chamber. There are no women among leaders of
major political parties, except Irina Khakamada, who was one of the leaders of
the Union of Right Forces, a liberal opposition party, and later on started her
own party. There are only 20% women among the 126 members of the Public Chamber,
which was set up as an institute of civil society.
Senior research associate of the Russian Academy of Sciences' Institute of
Comparative Political Studies Svetlana Aivazova points out that women's
negligible role in politics has absolutely clear consequences. For most women,
politics is an alien domain; their political behavior is driven by inertia, and
they tend to "live according to someone else's values, and to make their choices
based on emotions rather than reason," she explains. This has led to a number of
social problems, concludes Aivazova. Chairperson of the Russian Public Chamber
on social development Alexandra Ochirova agrees that without promoting women to
positions of power, the government will not be able to cope with its national
projects, the four key areas of social and economic development, which are
designed to make major changes in healthcare, education, housing and
agriculture.
As for non-government organizations (NGOs) established and run by women,
there were hundreds of them at a national level in the late 1990s. Three fifths
of such NGOs defend the rights of women, soldiers, and children. The second
place belongs to the associations that focus on education for women, ensuring
they have the training and qualifications to diminish discrimination in the jobs
market. Educational, charity, and business organizations come next. But no
matter how many public and government agencies deal with discrimination against
women, the gender asymmetry does not go away.
But equal rights are increasingly gaining a foothold in the family. More
often than not, spouses share household chores together, which is hardly a
surprise considering that many women make more money than their husbands. The
growing education level also contributes to promoting democracy in the family.
58% of all university students are girls. Although young people tend to be
career-minded and believe it is best to get married at 27-29 (rather than 22-24
as they used to), a mere eight percent of young women have said that are not
planning to have children after marriage.
Valentina Tereshkova was the world's first female cosmonaut; revolutionary
and feminist Alexandra Kollontai was the first female ambassador; Russian women
have reached the acme of perfection in poetry and science (there are 40 women
among members of the Russian Academy of Sciences today). But they have one more
major achievement to their credit - incredible patience with which they carry
the burden of gender imbalance.
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