Women and the city: reclaiming the streets to impose equal rights


Activists protest against gender
violence outside Mexico’s General Prosecutor’s office
in Mexico City on July 11, 2017.Pedro Pardo/AFP

In Argentina, “a woman is killed every 30 hours”, reports Telam, the country’s official news
agency, based on a report of the Observatorio de Femicidios Marisel Zambrano
from the NGO La Casa del Encuentro.

From July 1, 2015 to May 31, 2016, 275 women had been killed.
The violence that takes place in cities goes beyond robbery and assault, the
gang that controls the corner, the abuses, the drug ring that terrorises the
neighbourhood or the illegitimate use of force by diverse actors.

Violence is also hunger, a lack of basic services, and an unjust
legal system. And it is discrimination based on ethnicity, birthplace, sexual
orientation and age.

Urban design is for white young productive men

Women are the omitted subjects in much urban design and
planning. As Saskia Sassen expressed in a 2016 article:

“Urban planning is not gender neutral. While
there has long been research on how urban systems fail to respond to women’s
needs, it was only a decade ago that the subject surged. Since then, countless
cities have been host to initiatives addressing a version of the
‘urban-planning gendergap’.”

Much research and theory is now focusing on gender and cities,
bringing light to these omissions and to the subordinate situations of women in
cities.

Gender is here used as an analytical
category
 useful for highlighting the asymmetries between men
and women. Society is not binary therefore it is equally concerns LGTBI
population, youth, ethnicities, others.

Even as change is happening, many women experience the city
differently than men. Women combine productive work with family duties,
fragmenting the use of time and space. During daylight hours, public spaces are
more likely to be used by women, spending time in nearby parks, with children,
disabled and/or senior citizens. And yet, those spaces are mainly designed for
men’s needs. Urban design and planning, particularly since Modernism, has answered to
a universal citizen: white young productive men.

Millions of women and girls experience violence as a kind of
pandemic, natural, invisible and justified. Only recently has it been seen as
resulting from patriarchal conditions where ideology and culture hide symbolic
dominance and economic exploitation.

Urban planning often does not include women in the design.
Street lights, infrastructures are missing. UnsplashCC BY-NC-ND

A simple street light can reduce violence

This recognition has produced diverse initiatives. For instance,
the Safe Cities for Women Campaign developed
in Brazil by Action Aid for the municipality of Garanhuns, located in the state
of Pernambuco, launched a plan of public policies for women’s safety.

It includes strengthening the focus on women in special courts
of justice, police stations, police training, improvement in public transport,
investment in street lights, training on gender and violence against women in
schools, and more. Renata, a transsexual woman, political leader in Garanhuns
and an active member of the Women’s Forum of Pernambuco, reports on the positive actions taken by
the city, including how a simple investment in street lighting is reducing
violence.

Denying women’s work

If our understanding of cities and potential policy reforms are
to enhance social progress, we must revisit urban planning from a gender-based
perspective. The use of time and space should be central to gendered planning.

Mothers use time in fragments– domestic
tasks, school and health care each gets its own slice of time.

Women’s responsibilities as family careers are not recognized at
the workplace and thereby their economic contribution to both reproductive and
productive work is rendered invisible. Ana Falú takes this analysis further by
underlining the significance of both kinds of omission: it is the central
factor organizing urban space in ways that build obstacles for women.

Anà Falù in addressing women and public space.

As social sciences professor Silvia Federici points out:

“We must admit that capital has been very
successful in hiding our work. It has created a true masterpiece at the expense
of women. By denying housework a wage and transforming it into an act of love,
capital has killed many birds with one stone.”


Figure 5.8: Total time spent on paid and non-paid
work, disaggregated by sex,
hours per week.ECLAC (2016),Author
provided

This is not new. Jane Jacobs taught us in 1961 about the significance
of the proximity of basic services and infrastructures for women in particular.

Gaps in knowledge about omitted subjects are part
of a larger epistemological question central to systemic inequality and its
reproduction. Debates surrounding compact versus diffused cities, or the impact
of new, urban spatial fragmentation must address specific identity-based
exclusions.

Growth trends tend to be associated with women’s
social progress. And yet even though women at all levels of education are
better qualified than men, they earn less and much search longer for work. The
majority of women work in the low-end service sector.

Unemployment
rate, disaggregated by sex and race.
Based on IBGV/PNAD (2013), Author provided

Assessing the informal sector

A paradox persists: The more women work, the poorer they are.
For instance, in the Latin America and the Caribbean region, female
participation in the work force increased by 21% between 2002 and 2012,
totalling over 100 million women.

In this period, the region registered significant economic
growth and a decrease in poverty, but not among women. In 2002, there were 109
poor women for every 100 poor men; in 2012 the ratio rose to 118.

These trends point to a disjuncture between economic growth and overall social progress, a
pattern not unique to this region. Women constitute the majority of the low-paid service sector.

Haitian
domestic worker, 2012. Women account for the majority of such workers
yet they remain invisible. Alex Proimos/FlickrCC BY-SA

And in Latin America, 71% of domestic workers are women, most of
whom are indigenous and/or black. Further, poor women have high fertility
rates, having twice as many children than rich women. Accessing sexual, health
and reproductive rights is severely limited due to low social and economic
status.

The patterns in Latin America are evident throughout the world.
Data on the informal sector in India shows that home-based workers, numbering
23.5 million, are mostly women. In the South Asian context, women’s work place is
often determined by social and cultural constraints on mobility. As a result, home-based work is the one or only
possible option for women to secure an income. As in Latin America, this
pattern is unlikely to change even in times of robust development, such as
India saw over the past two decades.

Taking risks to build citizenship

In addition to space and income considerations for social
progress, it is central to consider the intangible dimension of violence
suffered by women in private and public spaces, just because they are women.
The persistence of male violence on the bodies of women to discipline them, is
one of the most universal human-rights violations in the world.

Diverse instruments have been adopted across the world: laws,
protocols, participatory planning and gender budgeting. But progress is slow,
as with all policy, political will and adequate resourcing are key to achieve
impact.

Reports on violence in cities find reports that 60% of women
feel unsafe in urban spaces. Criminality and threats limit women´s freedom of
movement. Women are poor in rights: political participation, autonomy, equal
access to work, infrastructure, transportation and security all are marked by
limited recognition of women’s rights.

Women can become invisible subjects in a context where the city
is a political territory for making citizenship. That is why women often have
to build their citizenship by taking risks. While this risk-taking builds
confidence in terms of advocacy, it nonetheless requires significant economic,
cultural and symbolic resources.

This post
belongs to a series of contributions coming from the International Panel on
Social Progress
, a global academic initiative of more than 300
scholars from all social sciences and the humanities who prepare a report on
the perspectives for social progress in the 21st Century. In partnership with
The Conversation, the posts offer a glimpse of the contents of the report and
of the authors’ research.

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