Monday, May 27, 2019

Changing Role of Women

Since the end of world war two, in 1945, Australian hostelry has witnessed many dramatic changes in the rights and freedoms of wo workforce. Women, who had been encouraged to take on mens jobs during the war were expected to vacate these positions and return to their traditional vocation in home making. Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s women were expected to either stay at home or work in underpaid womens jobs. Womens wages were significantly less in comparison to the wages awarded to men who performed the same task.The Commonwealth Arbitration Court ruled in 1949, that a womens basic wage should be set at 75% of the anthropoid rate. This was the practice throughout the 1950s when there was a large growth in the textiles, clothing, footwear and food processing industries depending on the cheap labor that women provided. The entrance that a womans place was in the home was reflected in and shaped by the Australian education system. The emphasis of the limited schooling visibl e(prenominal) to girls was in the home sciences . i. e. cooking and sewing.The lack of educational opportunities for women only reinforced sex role stereotyping and gave women little chance to achieve their potential. The introduction of the oral contraceptive pill in 1961 gave women the chance to achieve their potential. It gave them the freedom to choose when and if to bear a child. It provided women with the opportunity to concentrate on furthering their working careers, where available, thus leaving the interior(prenominal) housewife image behind. It provided women with power over their bodies for the first time they were in control of their sexual relationships.Thus, by the end of the 1960s, women were actively seeking greater rights and freedoms in society and in the workplace. Demonstrations and protests were a feature of this movement, known as the womans liberationist movement (today referred to as feminism). The fe priapic liberationists aimed to overturn the notions of female inferiority and male dominance in Australian society. Their dream was to free women from the restraints society placed upon them to challenge the spatial relation quo. Zelda DAprano was one Australian woman who formed the cleaning womans Action Committee in 1969.She chained herself to the doors of the Commonwealth Building in Melbourne demanding equal cover for both sexes. Germaine Greer was also an outspoken liberationist whose book The feminine Eunuch, 1970 , challenged the thinking of conservative male henpecked society. There was a diverse range of womens liberationist groups formed to campaign for specific issues revolving around terzetto main areas equal pay, discrimination in the workplace and equality of opportunity in the workplace and society.Specific issues included Child Care suitable pay for women Family Planning Divorce Discrimination in the workforce and from lending institutions The causes, clear arguments and outspoken activism of these groups attracted much media attention and faced resistance from traditional and conservative sections of society. For model church leaders were outraged when womens liberationists called for legalized abortion. Equality in the workplace has been and still is an important issue.In theory, the federal Equal Pay Case of 1969, dictated that women receive the same wage as men for the same work but this principal would not apply where the work was essentially or normally performed by women. By 1972, the Liberal government continued the debate, suggesting in Cabinet that wage rates should take into consideration training, skills and other attributes required for the satisfactory exertion of the work. See Source A, which is a copy of a Cabinet document, dated 24 October 1972, demonstrating this stance of the Liberal government in relation to calls for Equal Pay.By December 1972, the Labor Government had come to power and it promised to implement the Equal Pay for Equal Value principle in female dominate d industries though such a principal has proven difficult to implement. Equal opportunity has been and still is another important issue. In 1972, the Womens Electoral third house (WEL) was founded. WEL sought out politicians views on womans issues. It has had a major role in lobbying and influencing governments to pass laws friendly to woman in areas such as womans health and child care.See Source B, a photograph of a demonstration in Sydney in 1979, in which WEL activists are advocating for Medicare patronage for abortions. By the beginning of the 1980s, the fruits of the labor of the womens movement could be seen in many of Australias legal reformsThe family law act 1975 had established the principle of No Fault Divorce removing the social stigma associated with woman and divorce.The anti discrimination act 1977(NSW) which made it illegal to discriminate on terms of gender, marital status or pregnancy Sex Discrimination Act 1984 a commonwealth act banning discrimination against w oman.The Affirmative action act 1986 that was later replaced in 1999 by the equal opportunity for woman in the workplace act. By the end of the 1990s most woman believed that their struggles for equal rights and freedoms with men in society had been won, but that is not necessarily the case. While womens rights may have been enshrined in law, it is womens freedoms in society that have yet to be amply realized.

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