The 1995 United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women, held in Beijing, China, called on the world community to take action in twelve areas of critical concern to women: poverty, access to education and training, access to health care, violence against women, women and war, economic inequality with men, political inequality with men, creation of institutions for women’s advancement, lack of respect for women’s rights, stereotyping of women, gender inequalities and the environment, and violation of girl children’s rights.1 These are concerns that all women share, although degrees of inequality vary greatly from one country to another.
The feminization of poverty, the disproportionate number of women living in extreme poverty, applies to even the wealthiest countries, where two out of every three poor adults are women. There are many causes for this phenomenon. Because women are primarily responsible for child care in many cultures, they have less time and opportunity for work. Male labor migration increases the number of households headed by women and thus the number of families living in poverty. Job restrictions, discrimination, and limited access to education reduce women’s employment options. Birthrates are higher among poor women, particularly among adolescents. The poorest women usually suffer most from government policies, usually legislated by men, which restrict their access to reproductive health care and family planning.
Women have made gains in the workplace, making up 38 percent of the nonfarm-
Social class continues to be a major divider of women’s opportunities. Over the course of the twentieth century women from more affluent backgrounds experienced far greater gains in access to education, employment, and political representation than women in poverty did.