
NewsTurkish Tunes in Phoenix04/25/2012Phoenix's Musical Instrument Museum has an expanded Turkish music collection. Read about this extensive single-country exhibit that showcases mehter (Ottoman ceremonial) music, various traditions of the Turkish countryside, the music and movement of the Mevlevi Sufis, and the vibrant music of Turkey's urban centers that TPF is proud to support. Read more. Social Entrepreneurship in Turkey: Mustafa Sari Saves Van04/17/2012Booming is the adjective most often used to describe Turkey these days. Ranked the 16th largest economy (and growing) in the world, the country saddled between Europe and the Middle East is looked as a sound investment and economic model for others, especially in the region. Yet, it is important to note that this Turkish economic miracle is regional, contained to Turkey’s west. What happens in Istanbul stays in Istanbul. Read more. |
October 25, 2011
View from the UN on the Future for Women - Part 2
(Editor's Note: This post has been cross-posted at onphilanthropy.com ) In our previous issue, we carried the first part of an article based on an interview with Michelle Bachelet, former President of Chile and now head of UN Women. In Part 2, Bachelet talks to Turkish Philanthropy Funds about women, leadership, the "mommy careers" and why women's participation in politics is good for the country.What drives a woman to power?
Were there any occasions where she felt she was at a disadvantage because she was a woman? "There are always challenges when you start something new, and of course, people thought I might have a hidden agenda... That's why you work openly and select a good team."
Do women choose "soft power" issues such as development and social needs over the "hard-power" matters such as national security and defense policy? She protests. "There is nothing soft about social issues... Social protection, housing, education, these are important questions demanding serious economic and social decisions...true, women find these issues closer to heart..." Also true, she adds, "there are structural barriers against women's participation in security [areas]."
She believes quotas work. Of the 28 countries that reach or exceed UN's 30 percent goal for women representation in elected legislation, at least 23 have adopted the so called positive discrimination. Turkey is one of the countries that has not. At 14 percent, women's political participation in Turkey falls significantly below the European average of 22 percent.
Currently there are 19 elected heads of states or governments, I say softly, not really intending it as a question. "It is now 20" she corrects me, referring to the recent election of Thailand's Yingluck Shinawatra as Prime Minister. Not all powerful women are "gender sensitive," she says, recalling a meeting with a group of women executives in Davos. "Some don't like the gender perspective; they tell me I am here not because I am a woman but because I am good at what I do." Those women are fortunate, believes Bachelet, "they have been born in a cuddle of gold" or they don't realize they came to where they are "despite" being a woman. Especially young women in the developed world who don't face discrimination personally are not aware of the "structural conditions that disable woman." It is clear Bachelet sees a responsibility for women in the position of influence to empower and enable other women.
Do women really have a choice? "Every woman's situation is different" she responds. The key question we should ask ourselves is whether women "really" have a choice. "Our job is to make sure when a woman chooses to work, they can work, that they don't have to choose between their reproductive rights and their jobs, and that they have access to affordable child care." There are multiple benefits of working, she adds, "income, independence, possibility for growth, social contacts, and contribution to the economy." The same principle applies to the tension globalization has created between modernization and traditional values to an extent that it has dissuaded some governments from promoting women's rights. Should a woman have the choice to cover her body, or is that an inherently degrading act for women? Again, it is a matter of "real," informed choice, Bachelet explains.
A solid track record As a defense minister she improved access for women to the military and the police force, and saw that women would be admitted for the first time to the naval academy. As president, she made sure that women had the right to breastfeed at work. Not only did she turn around Chile's economy during the financial crisis, she established ambitious social protection programs for women and children, despite it. With the billions she saved from the revenues of copper sales, Ms. Bachelet's government legalized alimony payments to divorced women and tripled the number of free child care centers for low income families.
Despite some criticism that she was too hesitant to call on the military to respond to Chile's earthquake, she left office with an 85 percent approval rating, the highest since Chile went from dictatorship to democracy in 1990. And she had done it all, alone, without a prominent husband that typically propelled other women to become presidents in Latin America.
Macho to maternal: a new kind of leadership style
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