Ratih Amalia Lestari
15 Nov 2022 at 09:22EQUALITY OR EQUITY?
By: Ratih Amalia Lestari
Member of Duta Damai BNPT Provinsi Papua
Gender equality also does not mean that males
and females must always be treated the same. Given the existence of biological
sex differences, it is reasonable for males and females to have different legal
rights in some instances. For example, only females can ever require maternity
leave specifically for pregnancy and birth. In cases such as these, what is
required is not equal treatment, but equitable treatment. Equity means recognising that
differences in ability mean that fairness often requires treating people
differently so that they can achieve the same outcome. At times equity is
necessary to achieve gender equality, but there are many instances where this
is not the case. Most of the time, women
and girls are at no inherent disadvantage due to a lack of ability that
warrants differential treatment. Gender equality can often be achieved just by
holding everyone to the same standard. The problem, as highlighted by the
evidence reviewed above, is the irrational gender bias that women and girls are
routinely subjected to. The purpose of affirmative action policies to increase
female representation is to counteract systemic discrimination against women.
Affirmative action creates gender equity by overcoming the barriers women face
simply because of their gender. If we can eliminate this gender-based
discrimination, no such action will be necessary.
So if gender equality
does not mean that males and females must be identical or always require the
same treatment in order to achieve fairness, what does it mean? Gender equality
is seeing males and females as being of equal status and value. It is judging a
person based on their merit, and not viewing them as inferior or superior
purely based on their gender.
Unfortunately, the
evidence reviewed above suggests this prejudice is still widespread, and
we often aren’t
aware of our own biases. We cannot say
that we have gender equality until this prejudice is overcome and we have
eliminated the irrational bias that people have against somebody just because
they are female.
Equal rights are not enough. Inequality exists in our minds, in our biases and prejudices, and that remains to be fixed. Equal does not mean identical, one might object that there are meaningful differences between males and females, and these in turn are the source of gender inequality. Some believe that equality is the wrong word to use, because males and females can’t be equal if they are different.
But when feminists
refer to gender equality, we are not arguing that males and females are
identical or indistinguishable on all behaviour, preferences and abilities. Nor
does it mean all gender differences must be eliminated, or that we must have
equal gender representation in every field.
For instance, there are
many more male firefighters than female firefighters. Part of this is likely
due to gender differences in work preferences. But it is also partly due to
the physical
strength tests used in recruiting firefighters. These include being able
to lift a 72kg mannequin and 45 metres.
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