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-~It had a simple message about life. -~ It gave hope to women and people living in poverty. -~ It taught about taking care of the disadvantaged and enslaved.
American women fought for suffrage during the 19th and 20th century and finally achieved it 1920.
Sepali Kottegoda has written: 'Gender dimensions of poverty in Sri Lanka' -- subject(s): Poverty, Women in economic development
(For Apex Learning) Gender stratification.
It would probably be female as more women suffer from poverty than men around the world. Men often use women just for sex and then leave them once they become pregnant. Thus that leaves single mothers without anyone to provide for them.
The fourth wave of feminism is the wave that focuses on the issues of women in the Least Industrialized Nations. This wave aims to address global issues such as gender inequality, poverty, access to education, and healthcare for women in these regions. It emphasizes the intersectionality of gender with other forms of oppression based on race, class, and nationality.
Around 70% of the world's poor are women, according to the United Nations. This is due to multiple factors such as gender discrimination, limited access to education and employment opportunities. Empowering women economically is crucial in reducing poverty globally.
Gender equity is the process of being fair to women and men. To ensure fairness, strategies and measures must often be available to compensate for women's historical and social disadvantages that prevent women and men from otherwise operating on a level playing field. Equity leads to equality. Gender equality requires equal enjoyment by women and men of socially-valued goods, opportunities, resources and rewards. Where gender inequality exists, it is generally women who are excluded or disadvantaged in relation to decision-making and access to economic and social resources. Therefore a critical aspect of promoting gender equality is the empowerment of women, with a focus on identifying and redressing power imbalances and giving women more autonomy to manage their own lives. Gender equality does not mean that men and women become the same; only that access to opportunities and life changes is neither dependent on, nor constrained by, their sex. Achieving gender equality requires women's empowerment to ensure that decision-making at private and public levels, and access to resources are no longer weighted in men's favour, so that both women and men can fully participate as equal partners in productive and reproductive life.
Cher's gender is that of a female.
Indira Koirala has written: 'Monitoring gender, poverty, and social equity in natural resource management' -- subject(s): Information resources, Citizen participation, Conservation of natural resources, Bibliography, Women in sustainable development, Gender-based analysis, Sustainable development, Sustainable development reporting, Gender mainstreaming
Men
Men