Monday, April 7, 2003 |
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Feature |
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IT helps women voice
their opinion
Sakuntala Narasimhan
TURNING
adversity into advantage is what a successful go-getting strategy is all
about. Not surprising then, that the Association of Women in Development
(AWID) conference 2002, held in Mexico, came up with the suggestion that
globalisation, which has so far been seen as working against the
interests of women, could be co-opted for promoting gender equity.
More recently, examples
of such co-option in the area of information and communication
technology (ICT) for the benefit of women, were described during a
two-day consultation for grassroots development, organised by the United
Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Bangalore last week.
Globalisation means
economic liberalisation, which also means throwing markets open to
international competition. Market mechanisms work on the ruthless
principle of "survival of the fittest," and those who are
unable to compete because of the absence of a level playing field get
cruelly penalised. Resources like forests (used by the poor for grazing
or firewood and fuel, or even food in the form of wild produce) have
been appropriated by commercial undertakings operating for profit, thus
pushing the poor deeper into distress.
Women have been the worst
hit, deprived of even access to raw materials that helped them survive.
Documentary evidence is now available to show that there is a
correlation between the growth of the forces of globalisation, and what
has come to be known as the feminisation of poverty, worldwide.
Protests against
globalisation have been gathering strength in many regions of the world,
demanding that people’s rights to basic needs, employment and dignity
as human beings should be put first, rather than profits. But
globalisation has proceeded apace, leaving developing countries (and the
poorer sections in particular) helpless in the face of a relentless
juggernaut manoeuvred by the countries of the developed world.
And therefore the
question: If globalisation cannot be reversed, can it be co-opted to
help promote gender equity?
As one feminist activist
puts it, "Fire can be dangerous. It can burn and destroy and kill,
but the same fire, when used judiciously, can also be used to nurture
life, it can provide warmth and comfort and light..." If those
elements of globalisation that promise benefits to all sections of the
populace rather than just a few can be adopted, globalisation could well
be redefined.
In the West Godavari
district of the state of Andhra Pradesh, for instance, e-seva kendrams
(low-cost ICT centres) have been set up by Self Help Groups (SHGs) to
bridge the rural-urban digital divide, and enable lower income groups to
share information. "The Internet is, in fact, the most cost
effective method of reaching the people," observes bureaucrat
Sanjay Jaju, who is associated with this ICT initiative. In the same
state, the Deccan Development Society has installed transmitters for
connecting 5,000 rural Dalit women of Medak district, not merely as
receivers of information but also as producers of information, by using
broadcasts planned and produced by the community itself.
The Kutch Mahila Vikas
Sangathan in Gujarat that works with 10,500 rural women in 158 villages
in Kutch district began initially with a small newsletter before
changing over to radio broadcasts that reach even the illiterate in
remote areas. Programmes cover subjects like girls’ education, female
infanticide, women’s political participation, and a serial on women as
sarpanches (heads of the village council).
Another example is the use
of globalised technology to help provide access to information to the
physically challenged. Mitra Jyoti, an NGO working with the blind in
Bangalore, empowers these girls with skills and expertise that enable
self-reliance. A simple computer connected to a voice synthesiser and
suitable software becomes a talking computer so that a blind person can
navigate the screen. With a scanner connected to the talking computer,
the machine acts as a reading machine. Several user-friendly Websites
like www.eSight.org and www.disabilitynet.org become accessible. The
visually disabled can not only network and empower themselves but also
access job openings.
On a more global level, a
women’s electronic network called womensrightswatch (based in Nigeria)
used its network recently to mobilise support for Amina, who was
sentenced to death by stoning by a Sharia court. The network garnered
worldwide support against the death-by-stoning penalty. Women from
different continents were able to sign petitions extending their
solidarity with activists in Nigeria. — WFS
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