NZ in top ten for gender equality
NZ in top ten for gender equality | 360° look at domestic violence cycle
20 November 2015
Kia ora koutou, welcome to On Balance - the National Council of Women of New Zealand's weekly round-up of the latest gender equality news, research and events. Please share it with anyone you think might be interested and let them know they can subscribe here.
News from around the
country:
• The results of
the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Index are out
and New Zealand now ranks 10th out of 145 countries. This is
up from 13th in 2014. While we are doing well in educational
attainment, we still lag behind in health and survival and
economic participation
•
• Social workers
launched an historic case seeking equal pay for work they
say has been underpaid for years
•
• More than 30
leaders from top New Zealand businesses pledged to help
achieve diverse and inclusive leadership at the Champions of
Change launch
•
• A group of Hawke's Bay fathers
has been challenging the idea that childcare is a woman's
job. For the past five months, the Dads & Co group has been
engaging with their children through weekly activities,
which they "politely say are for dads
only"
•
• The man charged with murdering Napier
woman Victoria Foster at her Westshore home last month was
identified as former partner Chazz Hayden
Hall
•
• Two primetime documentary specials put
New Zealand women in the spotlight. NZ Women in Rock and The
Women of Pike River explored two very different struggles
experienced by NZ women
•
• More than 90 per cent
of South Canterbury women seeking help from Women's Refuge
are victims of sexual assault and both the number of women
being assaulted and the level of those assaults have been
rising, according to staff at Mid South Island Women's
Refuge and Family Safety Services
•
• A Lower
Hutt mother is pulling her 9-year-old boy from sex ed
class,claiming the content (which included information on
periods and wet dreams) was beyond his
years
•
• Health professionals are calling for
vasectomies to be fully funded by the public health system
so everyone, including low income earners, have access to
the contraceptive procedure
•
• Kiwi actress Ann
Paquin hit out at body shamers who criticised her choice of
dress. She tweeted “Fun fact: Wearing a dress that is not
skintight=Pregnant/invites people 2 call u fat. I'm neither
so thanks 4 that”
•
• This Sunday, WOMAN - The
Radio Show will be talking about the intricacies of maleness
in New Zealand. If you're in Wellington, tune into 783am at
7pm to hear the discussion. You can also listen to the shows
viaSoundCloud
•
• Stuff is currently inviting
contributions on what readers think needs to change to stop
the cycle of violence in New Zealand. All contributions made
so far can be read here
•
Latest
research:
• At least 100,000
Texas women aged 18 to 49 have attempted to end a pregnancy
on their own without medical assistance, found a report from
the Texas Policy Evaluation Project
•
• More than
half of working parents find it hard to balance work and
family, and women are struggling more than men, according to
a study by Pew Research Center. One in five working moms
said it’s not just difficult, but very difficult, versus
12 percent of working dads. And mothers were twice as likely
as fathers to say parenthood has hurt their
career
•
• Women’s career advancement isn’t
dependent on social connections in the same way it is for
men, found a study by Insead. It suggested women are more
likely to be promoted given a proven track record of
competence, inferred from their educational background or
past achievements
•
• Many women who miscarry
their baby feel so ashamed they can't even talk to their
husband about it, research has revealed
•
• The
average female dieter will have spent 168 weeks trying to
lose weight between the ages of 18 and 30. By the time they
reach 40, this increases to just under six years, or 308
weeks. The average woman diets twice a year, and loses 1.8
kilograms each time
•
• Nordic countries have the
most positive attitudes to gender equality in the world,
according to a survey carried out in 24 countries. The study
found that attitudes on men and women varied dramatically
from country to country
•
• A new report on
gender from the World Economic Forum ranked India 139th out
of 145 countries for female economic participation and
opportunity. The average female Indian worker was found to
only make one-fourth of the salary of male
counterparts
•
• Films with a female director
employ more women in behind-the-scenes roles – such as
writers, producers, editors and cinematographers – than
those helmed by men, suggest a US
study
•
• Infertility in Kiwi women has the
potential to become a prevalent problem, researchers at
Otago University say. The study of Otago - Southland women
found that about a quarter of those who had ever tried to
become pregnant or had become pregnant, experienced
infertility
•
• High-achieving women are not
meeting the career goals they set for themselves in their
20s – and it’s not because they’re “opting out” of
the workforce when they have kids. A Harvard Business School
study suggests that rather it is due to them allowing their
partners’ careers to take precedence over their
own
•
• Women around the world have narrowed the
gender gap in entrepreneurship by 6 percent from 2012 to
2014 and are finding paths to launching more businesses in
industrialised and developing nations, according to the
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2014 Women's
Report
•
• In England and Wales, more babies have
been born to women 35 and over than to those under 25 for
the first time
•
International
news:
• The World Economic
Forum believes it will take another 118 years - or until
2133 - until the global pay gap between men and women is
finally closed
•
• While Australian actress
Caitlin Stasey acknowledges being an attractive white woman
is a privilege, it is not necessarily a blessing when it
comes to being constantly typecast as "the pretty
girl"
•
• Even Mrs Claus is affected by the
gender pay gap – a five star hotel sparked an equal pay
row when it offered Santa almost double what his wife was to
receive
•
• For the first time in Barbie’s
glittering pink history, a boy has been featured in one of
the toy’s marketing campaigns
•
• Transgender
artists in America have reimagined Trans Day of Remembrance,
which is observed on November 20 each year to memorialise
those killed as a result of anti-trans violence. Through
their project, Trans Day of Resilience, they hope to support
trans women of colour in their lives, not just in their
deaths
•
• Eddie Redmayne said he finds the lack
of progress on transgender rights in the past century
"shocking" after playing 1920s transsexual pioneer Lili Elbe
in his new film The Danish Girl
•
• Thousands of
black women from across Brazil marched through the nation's
capital to call attention to the pervasive violence and
discrimination they suffer
•
• The chief
executive of Vanuatu's National Council of Women says
thecountry's male politicians must recognise the rights of
women to be in parliament. The council staged a forum to
help women planning to stand in the next election, due next
year
•
• Women in Tunisia will now be allowed to
travel with their children without the father’s
permission, according to a new law passed in the
country
•
• Canada’s national inquiry into the
disappearance or murder of nearly 1,200 indigenous women
will look radically different from previous attempts to
grapple with shocking levels of violence against aboriginal
women, according to the country's new federal indigenous
affairs minister
•
• President of Bolivia Evo
Morales came under fire for calling his health minister a
lesbian after seeing her speak to another woman while he
gave a speech
•
• November 19th marked Women’s
Entrepreneurship Day at the United Nations, a day to discuss
the obstacles facing women business owners globally and to
celebrate the successes of female
entrepreneurs
•
• Actress Lena Dunholm opened up
about her struggle with endometriosis, writing that she
hopes for a 'future in which the pain of teenage girls is
fully investigated, taken as seriously as a broken
leg'
•
• Actor Daniel Radcliffe spoke out in
support of co-star Emma Watson, and her HeforShe campaign to
promote gender equality. "I think it's fantastic that she's
bringing attention to it and adding to the conversation,”
he told Nylon magazine
•
• A British primary
school asked young girls to cover up by wearing opaque black
tights, as it would 'protect their
modesty'
•
• President Obama announced the
beginning of a five-year initiative thatpledges $100 million
to low-income black women and an additional $18 million to
research institutions studying the living conditions of
black women and girls
•
• Ruth Bader Ginsburg and
Gloria Steinem got together to discuss the unending fight
for women’s rights
•
• Screen NSW is aiming to
get more women working behind the camera in film and TV
production with the launch of its 50/50 gender equity
target
•
• US brewing giant Anheuser-Busch InBev
is setting out to win back women with a Super Bowl ad
campaign built around the idea that coming together over a
Bud Light can help solve the world's problems, including
unequal pay
•
• Boston's mayor announced the city
will be offering free two-hour salary negotiation classes to
every woman working in the city
•
• In Argentina,
39 percent of professional astronomers are women – a
number higher than most countries around the world – but
they still face “machismo in the
air”
•
• Various sororities in the US have
withdrawn support for the Safe Campus Act, a controversial
bill which restricts colleges’ ability to punish
perpetrators, and forces victims to pursue police
action
•
• Why do men who work with women get
more credit?
•
• The Party of Brazilian Women has
seven MPs in the House of Representative, all of whom are
men
•
• With accounts from a victim, a
perpetrator, a refuge worker, a Police officer, a magistrate
and a men's group convener, Daily Life gives a 360-degree
look at the domestic violence
cycle
•
Events:
• White
Ribbon Day is coming up on November 25 with events being
held throughout November
•
• From 25 November,
the International Day for the Elimination of Violence
against Women, to 10 December, Human Rights Day, 16 Days of
Activism against Gender-Based Violence campaign will be
recognised across the
world
ends