In Iceland, where gender justice statistics are higher than in most other parts of the world, tens of thousands of women including the country바카라檚 Prime Minister Katr铆n Jakobsd贸ttir went on strike last week to observe 바카라渒vennafr铆", or Women's Day Off. The planned walkout marked the first full-day women바카라檚 strike since 1975 and it shook the nation바카라檚 economy, even if just for a day, and became a jolting reminder of women바카라檚 contribution to the nation바카라檚 economy and production.聽
The strike evoked mixed reactions from certain quarters, especially from those living in nations where women face much harsher conditions across every aspect, be it employment, education, safety, and access to basic civil rights. Take India, for instance, which stood at the 135th position out of 146 countries in the United Nations바카라 (UN) Global Gender Gap (GGG) Index for 2022. Despite much advocacy and women바카라檚 rights movements across the world calling for equal rights and equality at work, only 14 nations in the world 바카라攊ncluding India바카라 have laws that ensure equal pay. Even in these nations, implementation has proved to be difficult as statistics on women바카라檚 employment show. These laws and the consequent progress they have harnessed over the years have nevertheless been the result of the long and persistent fight by feminist organisations, activists, authors, and millions of ordinary women who have repeatedly taken to the streets for equality.聽
The war against the wage gap has been long and arduous and spread across the world. Here is a timeline of some of the significant events and protests related to the gender wage gap across the world so far:
Starting in the聽19th and early 20th centuries, women바카라檚 suffrage movements around the world, such as in the United States (US), the United Kingdom (UK), and many European countries, advocated for women바카라檚 rights, including economic equality. These movements constituted the First Wave Feminism and laid the foundation for future protests related to the wage gap.
1911:聽Women teachers in New York fought a long and contentious battle with the Board of Education which finally granted them equal pay as their male counterparts, marking a significant precedent for women바카라檚 equality at work.聽
1918:聽The First World War pushed more women into work in countries like the US and UK, leading to calls and scattered protests for equal pay by workers, but the demand waned by the end of the war.聽
1949: The聽바카라楳ops on the March바카라櫬爌rotest saw 100 women cleaners marching in London with mops in hand to decry their low wages. Members of the UK바카라檚 Civil Service Union, these women were being paid a meagre 34c an hour and demanded a raise to 40c from Sir Stafford Cripps who was then the Chancellor of Exchequer. They carried placards with slogans that read 바카라淐leanliness is next to Godliness. Women cleaners are next to starvation바카라 among others.聽
1963:聽The United States passed the聽Equal Pay Act,聽which aimed to eliminate wage disparities based on gender for jobs requiring equal skill, effort, and responsibility. But women nevertheless failed to get equal opportunities or benefits of the act.聽
1968:聽Women sewing machinists making car seats at the Ford Motor Company in England바카라檚 Dagenham staged a聽walkout聽from the factory in July, demanding equal pay as their male counterparts. The high-profile protest ended after much negotiation and the women agreed to a 92 per cent raise. According to many, the protest had a far-reaching impact and, in fact, led to the passing of the Equal Pay Act in the UK in 1970.聽聽
1970:聽The聽Women바카라檚 Strike For Equality聽in the US spearheaded by second-wave feminists like Betty Freidan brought over 50,000 women to New York City on聽August 26, that year being the 50th anniversary of the passing of the 19th Amendment which gave women voting rights. The protest had three self-stated goals in general: free abortion, equal opportunity聽in the workforce, and free childcare.
1970s:聽The second wave of feminism led to a renewed focus on equal pay. Women in various countries, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada, organised protests and demonstrations to raise awareness about the wage gap.聽
1975:聽Women바카라檚 collective efforts compelled the United Nations to host the First World Conference on Women in Mexico City, which discussed gender equality, including economic issues like the wage gap. Women in Iceland observe 바카라榃omen바카라檚 Day Off바카라 on a massive scale for the first time.
1970s-80s:聽The Indian feminist movement strengthened with intersectional feminists from leftist, Ambedkarite, and liberal backgrounds leading protests against gender imbalance at the workplace and the pay gap among other issues. By 1976, the Indian government passed the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976聽that brought a provisional ban on pay discrimination against women
1981:聽Following widespread protests, the Canadian government established the Royal Commission on the Status of Women, which brought attention to pay discrimination issues.
1990:聽Iceland바카라檚聽바카라淲omen's Day Off바카라澛爌rotest, where 90 per cent of women in the country walked out of their jobs to protest wage inequality and other gender disparities.
1994:聽Responding to years of advocacy, demonstrations and street protests by feminists, South Africa바카라檚 post-Apartheid government introduces legislation addressing employment equity and equal pay for equal work, aiming to bridge the wage gap between racial and gender groups.
Late 1990s and early 2000s:聽Various countries, including the United Kingdom and Australia, introduced legislation and programs to address pay equity and the gender wage gap.聽聽
2010:聽Feminists in Sweden burn wads of cash by barbecuing them in order to protest against the gender pay gap. The聽Feminist Initiative聽Party says that the burnt money is a symbol of the sum Sweden바카라檚 women miss out on every minute in comparison to men. The party reportedly burnt 100,000 Swedish kronor, a move that received criticism as 바카라渄esperate바카라 at the time. In 2008, Swedish women working full-time were earning 19 per cent less than men. In 2022, it stood聽9.9聽per cent, perhaps reflecting the success of such demonstrations.聽
2017:聽The 바카라淒ay Without a Woman바카라澛爌rotest takes place in the US, inspired by International Women바카라檚 Day. Women are encouraged to strike from work and engage in other forms of protest to draw attention to gender inequality, including the wage gap.聽
2017:聽The聽Women바카라檚 March, following the inauguration of President Donald Trump, brings millions of women, including LGBTQ+ women, to the streets across the country, advocating for gender equality, including pay equity. Spreading beyond the US, the march saw huge-scale international participation with an estimated 7 million people having reportedly marched peacefully all over the world on that day including remote countries like Antarctica 바카라 to advocate human rights, freedom, and equality for all. Organised largely through social media hashtag campaigns, one of the most enduring images of the march was the pink 바카라減ussyhat바카라, a campaign that urged people to knit and sew over a million hats that protesters wore across the marches.
2018:聽Women of Brazil took to the streets en masse against the reelection of President Jair Bolsonaro who has vehemently justified sexual violence and gay the country바카라檚 yawning gender wage gap. Millions also tweeted the hashtag聽#NotHim聽to mark their dissent. This was not the first or last time Brazilian women have taken to the streets against Bolsonaro바카라檚 sexist statements and politics.
2019:聽The聽바카라淯n Dia Sin Nosotras바카라澛(A Day Without Us) protest in Mexico sees millions of women staying home from work and other activities to protest gender-based violence and discrimination, including unequal pay.
2020:聽The COVID-19 pandemic exposes and exacerbates gender and LGBTQ+ disparities in the workforce. Protests and advocacy efforts focus on these disparities and the need for better workplace policies.
2021:聽To mark Women바카라檚바카라 Day, about 30,000 women, activists and workers participate in a 바카라渇eminist strike바카라 in Paris, France, to protest against the 바카라25 per cent pay gap바카라 between men and women. Women showed up in their work uniforms, and many carried musical instruments to make their point peacefully. 바카라
2022:聽Hundreds of mothers accompanied by Nigerian feminist author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and others took to the streets of the UK in October to participate in the聽바카라淢arch of the Mummies바카라. Organised by a civil society group called Pregnant Then Screwed, the protest was meant to call for reforms to the childcare sector in the UK which exploits women바카라檚 unpaid work.聽
2023:聽바카라楤arbie바카라 film actors and writers went on a strike to demand better pay and conditions in July, ahead of the film바카라檚 release. Ironically, the film won accolades on social media for making a point about gender roles in the real world. In fact, members of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) and Writers Guild of America (WGA) among others have been protesting against the same for some time. The typical actor part of such unions, regardless of sex, made just $53,170 in 2021 which is low as per American standards. But women actors make substantially less.
2023:聽Iceland makes a strong statement with even the Prime Minister joining the women바카라檚 strike for a day in solidarity against the gender gap and gender-based violence.聽