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Changes in women’s life as a result of
Industrial Revolution
Patriarchy is a social system through
which men dominate, exploit and oppress women. However, in
recent decades, changes in the economy and society have
altered the situation – several of these changes will be
outlined below.
One of the most important areas to look at for
the changes in women’s lives is in terms of pay and
employment relative to men. Women are less likely than men
to be in paid employment, but the gap has closed steadily
over recent decades. The proportion of those in employment
who are women rose from 38.1% in 1971 to 49.6% in 1995.
However, most of the increase in women’s employment has been
in part time work. The proportion of women working part time
has increased steadily, from 34% in 1971 to 47% in 1995.
Women workers are concentrated within a very
narrow range of occupational groups, although there have
been some significant changes in this recently. Over 40% of
full time women workers are to be found in clerical
employment. In contrast, men are spread through a much wider
range of occupations. Women are confined both to lower grade
jobs (vertical segregations) and to different jobs
(horizontal segregation). The pattern of segregation however
has changed significantly over recent years. At the top end
of the hierarchy the number and proportion of women in the
managerial and professional grades have substantially
increased. However, in the most powerful positions in public
life, women continue to be seriously under-represented.
Walby notes that in 1992 only 9.2 per cent of MPs were
women, there were no women Chief Constables until the 1990s,
and in 1994 only one in 25 High Court judges was a woman. In
1996, there was only one woman among 50 British ambassadors
or heads of overseas missions.
Linda McDowell uses the theory of post-Fordism
to understand changes in the labour market. This theory
argues that businesses have moved away from mass production
towards the flexible production of small batches of
specialized products. In doing so, they employ a core of
highly skilled workers who are capable of using their skills
to produce a wide variety of products. Other work is carried
out by part-time workers, or workers on short-term
contracts, or is contracted out to other firms.
McDowell argues that these changes are
reflected in the increased use of part-time female labour
and the reduction in the employment of males in full-time
permanent jobs. But while it is clearly important to take
account of changes in the labour market and the economy as a
whole in order to understand the changing patterns of gender
inequality, it is necessary to be cautious about basing an
analysis on the theory of post foridsm. This theory has been
heavily criticized on a number of grounds, and the work of
Lovering and others suggests that post Fordism cannot be
seen as a general trend that has affected all employers.
A different explanation for the changing nature
and pattern of women’s employment in countries such as
Scandinavia has been the shift to state policy. Talcott
Parsons had proposed a functionalist explanation of women’s
disadvantaged position in the labour market, which focused
on the impact of the household. He argued that men get paid
more because women’s domestic responsibilities adversely
affect their involvement in paid work. However, in
Scandinavia, there is a much greater public provision of
childcare together with higher rates of female employment
and a smaller wages gap between women and men. Thus changes
to state policy can improve the nature and pattern of
women’s employment.
But has there been any change in women’s pay
relative to men’s? The implementation of the Equal Pay Act
between 1970 and 1975 reduced the wages gap a little. In
1970 women earned only 63% on men’s hourly rates, and only
55% of men’s gross weekly pay. In 1997, women working full
time earned 81% of men’s hourly rate, but those women
working part time only earned 59% of men’s hourly rates.
Thus the size of the gap has been closing steadily for those
working full time, but not for those working part time.
It does seem therefore that the position of
women in employment has transformed itself in recent years,
though there remains considerable inequality and the picture
is not one of simple progress.
One area where there have been considerable changes for women’s
lives has been in education. Education has seen a
transformation of the position of girls and young women. In
schools, not only has the traditional gender gap in
examination performance been closed but girls have overtaken
boys; while in higher education the gender gap is closing
steadily. One reason for the change is the discrimination
against women in education was made illegal in the 1875 Sex
Discrimination Act. A further reason was the increase in the
opportunities for women in the world after education as the
labour market gradually opened up. These changes in
education have potential implications for other aspects of
gender relations - since access to good jobs as some
relationship to educational qualifications, women might
anticipate taking a higher proportion of top jobs. It may
also have an impact on wages, in so far as lack of
qualifications, rather than discrimination, was a reason for
women’s poor rates of pay. However, while girls are learning
in new areas, boys are not learning those subjects
traditionally learned by women eg at present, only 15% of
all boys do home economics.
A further important issue to look at when
considering the changing lives of women, is in the area of
the household. The most striking change is the increased
likelihood of families being formed of only mothers and
children, which reflects to a large degree the large
increase in divorce rates. The number of lone parents
increased from 8% in 1981 to 21% in 1996, and the vast
majority of these are women. One of the most significant
features of one-parent families is their tendency to live in
poverty, leading to many forms of social exclusion. The
poverty largely results from the lack of a male income into
the household, but is compounded by the lower propensity of
lone mothers to be in employment as compared with married
mothers. Changes in the welfare state are also important in
that they have disproportionately affected women because
more of them head single parent households and more live to
pensionable age. Women in old age are thus particularly
vulnerable to the risk of poverty. A further change in the
household has been in attitudes towards housework. Men are
now more likely to accept that women should not be
responsible for all the housework. However, it does seem
that while there has been a change in attitudes, this is not
to a great degree played out in action. The UK is in
contrast to some countries such as Sweden where there is
more shared parenting and childcare is part of education for
boys and girls.
Changes in sexuality have been a further impact
upon women’s lives. Giddens argued that there has been a
‘transformation of intimacy’ in recent years. It is widely
suggested that women have made great advance towards
equality with men in the area of sexuality. The sexual
double standard, whereby non-marital sex was acceptable for
men and not for women has reduced. Other changes include the
much greater availability of contraception and safe
abortion, which has made unwanted children much less likely.
Furthermore, there has been greater acceptance of a wider
range of sexual practices, such as gay and lesbian
relationships.
Feminist movements have also helped to change
and shape women’s lives. The 1970s was the second wave of
feminism in the twentieth century, the early one being
instrumental in winning political citizenship for women.
Many of the feminist ideas of the 1970s which had been
considered outrageously radical when first expressed are now
widely accepted. For instance, male violence is now
recognized as a significant problem and the subject of
serious discussion by the police as well as feminists. Equal
pay is also an early feminist demand now accepted into
mainstream policy initiatives such as Opportunity 2000.
In Gender Transformations(1997), Walby reviews
changes in patriarchy in the 1990s. Although she discovers
plenty of evidence that patriarchal structures remain in
place in Britain, she also finds evidence of important
changes. In particular, she claims that there is evidence of
a generational difference between older and younger women.
Older women tend to be restricted by the constrains of
private patriarchy, which was the dominant form of
patriarchy in their early lives. They are likely to have few
qualifications and therefore have limited opportunities in
the labour market. Younger women, on the other hand, have
benefited from some of the changes that have taken place.
They are likely to benefit from increased qualifications and
improved labour market opportunities. Walby thus points to
polarization between the younger and older women, while
convergence between younger women and men.
In conclusion, there have been many changes in
the transition to modernity, which have shaped women’s
lives. While some of these changes have reduced gender
inequality n recent years, especially in the field of
education, the basic pattern of inequality remains in most
aspects of the social structure, from paid work to the
household divisions of labour, from sexuality to violence.
This essay has pointed to many changes in women’s lives, but
whether their lives have improved has been a matter of
debate: Liberal feminists tend to see these changes as
progress, while radical feminists tend to argue that little
has changed and patriarchal domination remains firmly
intact. Marxists usually claim that industrialization and
the advent of capitalism led to a deterioration in the
position of women and since the Industrial Revolution little
has improved.
Bibliography
Mcdowell L ‘Father and Ford revisited: gender, class and
employment change in the new millennium’ Transactions of the
Institute of British Geographers 2001
Walby Gender Transformations
Abercrombie, Warde et al, ‘Contemporary British Society’
Haralambos and Holborn ‘Sociology’
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