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March 8, 2019

Backlash and gender fatigue. Why progress on gender equality has slowed

Pink pussy hats are out at International Women’s Day events, but they are facing opposition. Credit: ,
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Pink pussy hats are out at International Women’s Day events, but they are facing opposition. Credit: ,

We are in the midst of an outpouring of feminist activism kicked off by the movement in the United States and propelled by #MeToo, which has spread to Australia where a range of luminaries have been .

And yet we are also in the midst of a backlash, a concern that gender equality has , aided by "gender fatigue".

Twenty-seven years ago, created a furore by documenting what she said was a backlash against women. She said it wasn't new, as evidenced by penalties imposed on childless and unwed women in ancient Rome, and witch burnings of medieval Europe. Each was a response to perceptions that women were gaining ground.

This time it is taking the form of a resurgence of the men's rights movement, and also in the cries of . It is evident in the trolling occurring on feminist websites, in the media and the rape, violence and death threats inflicted on feminist activists.

That's in social media and society. What about the workplace?

Backlash in the form of fatigue

It can be as simple as organisational silence and inaction. Even in organisations where managers and workers are committed to the idea of equality, it can take the form of resistance to specific initiatives.

It is aligned to gender fatigue, or seeing further advances in gender equality as a "non-issue".

My colleagues (Associate Professor Linda Colley, Dr. Meraiah Foley and Professor Rae Cooper) and I have examined managers' and employees' understanding of gender equality and have often been told "".

It is as if they are tired of hearing about it and want it to be "done".

While we have found many organisations which are well advanced in their journey, we have yet to find one in which it is actually done.

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What's worth aiming for

Sometimes women are told that the remaining gender inequality is their own fault. #Metoo has been blamed for men being women. Women are told to "" – to focus on empowering individuals rather than in general.

British researchers Hazel Conley and Margaret Page say real change will when there is "an understanding of gendered power and its intersections with other forms of inequality, individual commitment to act on this knowledge and the collective organisation to approach gender ."

That understanding might lead to non-hierarchical organisational structures with different concepts of power. It might subvert the concept of so that it is no longer regarded as the guiding force of lives. It might mean working to live, not living to work. It might mean that there isn't paid work and other work, just "work".

It might make future backlash unnecessary, and fatigue redundant.

Provided by The Conversation

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