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International Relations: An Analysis of
Gender Issues
The current position of women
around the world is better than it has ever been,
for great strides have been made in
gender equality since the beginning of the women’s rights movement
in the nineteen-seventies. But much remains to be done, especially
in the Third World and the Middle East,
where millions of women are still oppressed by rigid social and
religious codes.
Women’s issues tend to be ignored
by the international community because pressing global challenges
and disputes demand so much of the attention of the United Nations
and other international organizations. The U.N., as well as various
IGO’s and NGO’s, have been striving for many decades to provide
economic assistance to failing states,
and dealing with this as well as with
famine, civil wars, peacekeeping, environmental concerns, and global
trade issues diverts much-needed attention from international issues
of concern to millions of women. (Kissinger 162)
In addition to IGO and NGO efforts,
the United Nations and the international community have made
numerous efforts to provide food to famine and poverty stricken
regions and peacekeepers to states torn by conflict, which of course
benefits women. But these efforts have met with mixed success in
recent years, for in African states such as Somalia, Nigeria,
Zimbabwe, and Liberia, warlords have confiscated the food supplies
to enhance their power and influence among their people, while in
these states and the Balkans, UN peacekeepers have been intimidated
and even killed.
The political agendas, motivations,
and interests involved in dealing with women’s issues in
international forums are often sources of controversy, for mutual
mistrust between Third World states and the free-market,
industrialized nations has prevented significant progress from being
made. Politically, it is in the interests of the West to promote
and protect women’s rights, especially in fragile Third World
states. But an impasse is often reached when Third World societies,
especially in the Middle East, do not wish to extend certain
political, social, or economic rights to women or become Westernized
in any way. (Kissinger 161-172)
In regard to international women’s
issues, it is evident that one’s
theoretical perspective influences the attitudes one has and
subsequently determines which actions are supported or resisted.
Westerners and their governments are generally guided by liberalism,
and believe that women should have equality. They believe that
twentieth century history has proven the value of gender equality
and seek to spread the acceptance of equal rights for women around
the world.
Unfortunately, Western governments motivated by liberalism to extend
equal rights
to women
are often accused by Third World leaders of imperialism and economic
greed no matter how selfless their actions may be. Compounding the
problem is the fact that elements in some Western governments do
in fact have neo-imperialist ambitions and are motivated to a
certain extent by economic greed.
Furthermore, in most Middle Eastern states, leaders who subscribe to
fundamentalist Islamic views regarding women and their roles resent
what they consider to be Western interference in their societies and
cultures. If the West, through the United Nations or any other
international group attempts to promote gender equality in any way
in their
countries, their reaction is often negative and even openly hostile.
Subsequently, international relations become strained, and
international organizations become hesitant to promote gender
equality and women’s issues become a low priority for them. This is
unfortunate, but such reluctance has been common for many years, and
it is understandable to a certain extent because most international
organizations have no means of enforcement. Defiant states
understand this all too well, for the past has proven that the
international community is rarely able to unite and take concerted
action even in the most serious of crises.
The region most in need of women’s rights reforms is the
volatile tinderbox of the Middle East, where religious tensions,
poverty, illiteracy, economic resentment, and anti-Semitism have
combined to nurture the emergence of radical Islamic fundamentalism.
(Wright 266-267) While other states in Southeast Asia, South and
Central America, Africa, the Balkans, and the former Soviet Union
continue to oppress women, the Middle East remains the region of
deepest concern, but since Middle East oil is vitally important to
the global economy, the Middle East is the birthplace of three great
religions, and terrorist ideologies have thrived throughout the
region, the international community is reluctant to incite further
instability by promoting gender equality.
In conclusion, while women’s rights advocates have made much
progress through
out many regions of the world over the
last thirty years, much more needs to be done
by the international community in order
to raise women to full equality with men. Unfortunately for
millions of oppressed women, the process of international relations
continues to be dominated by other concerns, such as free trade, the
resolution
of disputes between nations, and
environmental issues.
Sources
Kissinger,
Henry. Diplomacy. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994.
Wright, Robin. Sacred Rage:
The Wrath of Militant Islam. New York: Touchstone Books, 2001.
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