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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, August 21, 2001 |
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Institutionalising social transformation
THE NATIONAL Policy for the Empowerment of Women 2001 is an
attempt to institutionalise the gains of women's movements across
the country. Taking the Constitution as its point of departure,
the National Policy outlines the historical context within which
it is located, which interestingly is the historical context of
the women's movement as well: the international conferences from
Mexico (1975) through Nairobi (1985) to Beijing (1995) and the
follow-up on Beijing; the women's movement and the widespread
network of non-government organisations with a mass base; the
landmark "Status of Women" documents in the country Towards
Equality and Shramshakti.
The objectives and goals of the National Policy include the
creation of an enabling environment for women through economic
and social policies, active protection of rights, equal access to
decision making and social sector needs, strengthening
institutional support systems and legal machinery, and forging
partnerships within civil society. In short, the active and
committed elimination of all forms of discrimination against all
women. These objectives, the Policy affirms, will be realised
through a review and formulation of positive measures in the
judicial legal system, decision making, through the economic and
social empowerment of women.
A cursory reading of the Policy gives the impression that it is a
feminist charter. A feeling that we have a government with a
feminist imagination. A more careful consideration throws up the
basis for that likeness. The Policy incorporates all the major
concerns and issues that the women's movement has engaged with
over the past two and a half decades: domestic violence, rape,
poverty, conditions of work, employment, representation, support
and solidarity networks, access to credit, health, nutrition,
child care, education, housing, rights, the adverse impact of
globalisation, prostitution, single women, property rights and so
on. The agenda of the women's movement is a policy concern now.
This is cause for celebration, yet troubling.
Operational strategies
Women's groups across the country have survived losing battles
with each case and on each issue. The struggle was essentially
against a state that was either unresponsive or in complicity
with families and communities that divested women of rights with
impunity. That is, when the state was not itself the perpetrator
of crimes against women. While we do have the Domestic Violence
Prevention Bill and a few other small victories on paper (we
don't yet know how effective they will be), there is no
significant change in the condition of women despite years of
struggle. What we do have is some measure of reparation with
respect to data on women. But the critical issue, violence,
continues unabated. Given this reality, the implementation of the
policy and the operational strategies are areas that are deeply
problematic.
It might be pertinent first to look at the issues the Policy
addresses. It makes specific mention of "social exclusion" of
women of the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes/Other Backward
Castes, social stereotyping, violence and discrimination against
girl children and women both in the economy and society. This is
particularly significant when viewed against the government's
averments on caste today, in the context of the Racism
Convention.
Yet another significant point in the Policy is the recognition of
the needs of "Women in Difficult Circumstances". These are "women
in extreme poverty, destitute women, women in conflict
situations, women affected by natural calamities, women in less
developed regions, disabled widows, elderly, single women in
difficult circumstances, women heading households, those
displaced from employment, migrants, victims of marital violence,
deserted women and prostitutes, etc." All women who are situated
on the margins - of society and Policy - are now at the centre of
official concern. This concern, far from being the product of
imaginative policy, has to be viewed against the corpus of
incisive feminist research and persistent advocacy on the rights
of and denial of rights to each of these constituencies.
Impact of globalisation
The Women's Policy, at several points, picks up the concern of
the negative impact of globalisation on women. Starting off from
the observation that the underlying causes of gender inequality
are related to social and economic structure, it asserts the need
to frame positive economic policies that will enable women to
realise their full potential by participating in decision making
in the social and economic life of the nation. The displacement
of women from employment, the increase in trafficking in women
and girls and the lack of accountability of the electronic media
networks in the era of globalisation, all issues that have been
extensively debated, especially by the critics of globalisation,
find mention in the Policy. Acknowledging that the new global
economy is characterised by an uneven distribution of resources
and opportunity, the feminisation of poverty and unsafe working
environments, the Policy states that women will be empowered to
meet and contend with these impacts. Clearly the elimination of
the impact or its source is not within its power.
Particularly telling is the section on environment, which focuses
on conservation and restoration and the promotion of programmes
of non-conventional energy resources. The involvement of women in
propagating the use of solar energy, biogas, smokeless chulhas,
etc., is an initiative that has been tried out at the micro level
with varying degrees of success over the past two decades at
least. Placing this initiative within the programmatic framework
of policy is an acknowledgement of its positive contribution. The
critical participation of women in environment struggles at the
macro level (the anti-dam movements immediately come to mind) do
not enter the account, even in terms of the socio-historical and
political context of the Policy. Yet this is not surprising,
since globalisation is a fact that the Policy does not/cannot
engage with in any fundamental manner.
The operational strategies of the National Policy range from the
collection and collation of gender disaggregated data at every
level, gender audits and evaluations to the creation of a multi-
tiered institutional structure from the Central level to self-
help groups at the village level. Again, some of this is a
restatement of what already exists. What is new, however, is the
proposal to set up National and State Councils to ensure the
implementation of the Policy. These councils will be headed by
the Prime Minister and Chief Ministers with representatives from
the government, NGOs, women's organisations, corporate sector,
trade unions, academics and social activists, among others.
National and State Resource Centres will function as clearing-
houses of information on women.
Problematic part
This is really the most problematic part of the Policy. The
Policy draws substance and perspective from rights based
struggles and research over the past three decades in the
country. The issues that have emerged as areas of concern,
likewise, were brought into focus by the women's movement and by
women in other movements, like the Dalit movement or the
environment struggles. The advocacy and action on all these
fronts has been both effective and successful, which is why the
issues have found mention in the Policy. To restate the point,
the mainstreaming of the entire gamut of issues that find place
in the National Policy on Women's Empowerment 2001, is a direct
result of civil society interventions and resistance struggles in
different parts of the country. Logically then, since there are
systems that are already in place in civil society, that are
doing the work, the Policy should create mechanisms to affirm and
support the non-state institutional mechanisms that have built up
legitimacy and credibility through their work.
Instead, by proposing parallel institutional structures under
state authority that replicate/appropriate the work of existing
institutions might lead to an adversarial situation, with the
work of non-state institutions and groups being seriously
undermined. Finally, the record of institutional apparatuses set
up by the state is far from encouraging. Most of the existing
institutional mechanisms set up by the state are extremely
patriarchal and headed by people with very reactionary views on
women. By creating a new set of institutions which will be
managed by personnel, mostly politicians and bureaucrats for whom
the work will be merely another portfolio/posting, there is a
very real danger of the Policy remaining a radical and attractive
document on empowerment that on the ground disempowers women.
KALPANA KANNABIRAN
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