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Turning Globalization and the Diffusion of Democracy into Opportunities for Women and Girls

Enabling Gender Equality: Future Generations of the Global World

ISBN: 978-1-78560-567-3, eISBN: 978-1-78560-566-6

Publication date: 13 November 2015

Abstract

Considering the recent trends of the increasing globalization of the market economy and the diffusion of democracy, the modern world needs to pay closer attention to pro-women and pro-girls policies if gender discrimination is to be challenged. Such policies could mark an era of building greater gender equality across the world by strengthening domains of women’s well-being that have been shown to decline in the initial years of the democratization and globalization of countries.

Women, who have more complex societal roles than men and whose employment is more tenuous, are more vulnerable to the rapid restructuring in macro-political and economic systems and bear more of the costs of systemic changes. My world-scale analyses show that women and men benefit unequally from the growth of democracy and the global economy – men’s well-being improves with the growth of democracy and globalization but women’s well-being declines. According to my follow-up studies, the decline lasts for over a decade (2014). These findings suggest that prior results of research proposing that democracy and the global economy improve people’s well-being are most likely biased when gender and the level of development in countries are not accounted for. To protect women and girls and to avoid gender discrimination, globalizing and democratizing countries should prioritize gender mainstreaming in their policies.

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

This work was supported in part by a research grant from the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University at Buffalo, by two IREX travel grants, and by a research grant from the Soros Foundation obtained by the author. An earlier draft of this paper was presented at the World Conference on Women’s Studies (WCWS 2015) Annual Meeting in Colombo, Sri Lanka, in March 2015. I thank Adam Przeworski, John Markoff, Eunice Rodriquez, Matthew Evangelista, Edward Lehman, as well as discussants at the WCWS meeting for comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript. I extend my special gratitude to Dorothy Kester and Eric Hallett, who shared editorial comments at various stages of these analyses.

Citation

Wejnert, B. (2015), "Turning Globalization and the Diffusion of Democracy into Opportunities for Women and Girls", Enabling Gender Equality: Future Generations of the Global World (Research in Political Sociology, Vol. 23), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 3-27. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0895-993520150000023001

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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