Sioux women ( like all other tribes) are seen as equal as the men......the Sioux believe in the teachings of the medicine wheel, this means that all things are connected and part of the same circle, if anything on the circle becomes out of place then the entire wheel wobbles until it breaks, this helps us understand that everything in the world is one.....a example of this is that we breathe oxygen but exhale carbom dioxide while a tree breaths carbon dioxide but exhales oxygen. Just as the Sioux see everything in the world as being created by the great creator we see this in the same fashion as the women since the woman creates life. The women are seen as the keepers of a tribe, while men hunt and protect...the women maintain the tribe as a whole. Which this also goes back into the teachings of the medicine wheel in that all things are equal and all things are needed in order for the wheel of life to maintain it's movement. No one thing in life is greater than another.
The status of women in the society in the sangam age was not equal to that of men
slaves
tHEY HAD THE RIGHT TO VOTE IN ELECTIONS
Kennedy supported women's rights. During is administration the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women (PCSW) was created by executive order 10980 signed on December 14, 1961 to advise the president on issues concerning the status of women. The Commission influenced the creation of the National Organization for Women. During the Kennedy administration focus shifted from protections for women to equality of women and Congress considered 412 bills related to the status of women.
It depends on which society and which region of the world and the time period you are referring to. Status of women varies greatly and has varied greatly throughout history and in modern day societies.
the Sioux women taught girls to cook,tan hides,make clothing, and assemble tipis.
Nope the Sioux did not farm Because the women got fruit for the people of the Sioux nation.
Two
Presidential Commission on the Status of Women was created in 1961.
buffalo skin dresses and skirts.
the women made the clothes
Muslim women never lost their high status.
Kellie Leitch is the Minister for Status of Women for Canada.
The status of women in the society in the sangam age was not equal to that of men
There are many areas where women enjoyed high status like Egypt. Women also enjoyed high status in the Maurya empire.
The Sioux were a particarcal society, meaning that the men were mostly in charge of running how the society lived. In particarcal societies, the job of hunting went to men, while the women tended to the settlements.
they hunted, but then the trade when the europeans came. there status also comes from how much land you own