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The Gender Regime of the US
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The Gender Regime of the US
Definition of Gender Regime: the beliefs, customs, social structures, laws and institutions that structure women (and men’s) participation in civil society, the economy, and the state (Brunell, Lecture Notes, “Intro to Gender Regimes”).
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The Gender Regime of the US
This presentation will discuss women’s status and roles in each of the three spheres comprising a Gender Regime: Civil Society the Economy the State (Politics)
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The Gender Regime of the US Civil Society
Civil Society comprises the individual, family, groups (both formal and informal) Women play important and often under recognized roles in US Civil Society They are engines of social capital formation through their work in informal social networks They are social activists and political entrepreneurs And, they are central figures in American families; in fact, nearly one-fourth of American children grow up in mother-only households (
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The Gender Regime of the US Civil Society: Religion
American women’s roles in family and society have been significantly shaped by beliefs and values of America’s predominant religion: Christianity
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The Gender Regime of the US Religion: Christianity
The first settlers of the US were Protestant Christians seeking freedom to practice their version of Christianity The Founders of the American Republic were Christians who espoused their belief in god and saw him as the source of “man’s inalienable rights” Thus, while American society has in some ways grown more secularized over time, the American Republic has been profoundly shaped by Christian beliefs and practices
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The Gender Regime of the US Religion: Christianity
Christianity posits that the world was created by an omnipotent, omniscient god While most theologians describe the Christian god as being “genderless” or “beyond gender,” most Christians refer to god as “He” and “God, the Father”
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The Gender Regime of the US Religion: Christianity
Most Christian denominations also deny women full participation in the church by refusing to ordain them or allow them to play pastoral or sacramental roles For these and many other theological reasons, many feminists refer to Christianity as a patriarchal religion
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The Gender Regime of the US Patriarchy
Patriarchy is defined as: 1: social organization marked by the supremacy of the father in the clan or family, the legal dependence of wives and children, and the reckoning of descent and inheritance in the male line; broadly : control by men of a disproportionately large share of power (Merriam-Webster On-line, The US qualifies as a patriarchal society in that Property, inheritance and family name were exclusively male rights until the latter part of the 20th Century. Even today, the male-headed family is the cultural ideal and legal norm. Female-headed families are pathologized; in fact, socially, they do not exist except in the case where there is no male present in the home.
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The Gender Regime of the US Economy
One reason female headed households are of concern is that they are disproportionately poor. This is partially explained by the fact that these households are surviving on one income. However, it also reflects the undervaluing of women’s labor, the concentration of women in the lowest paying jobs and professions, and the ways that women’s responsibility for child rearing disadvantage their work force participation.
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The Gender Regime of the US Motherhood
Before going any further, we need to address an issue that has been raised by the presentation thus far. That is: the apparent conflation of women with motherhood.
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The Gender Regime of the US Motherhood
I am not arguing that to be a mother is to be quintessentially female, or that all women become mothers. It is true, however, that at least 80% of all American women DO become mothers during their lifetimes ( And that motherhood has a significant negative impact on their lifetime earnings (Crittenden, The Price of Motherhood, pp.88-93). It is also a fact that women are often viewed as “potential mothers” affecting the way they are perceived by employers (“We shouldn’t hire her; she’s just going to go off and get pregnant and leave us holding the bag.”) and many people in society (“Women shouldn’t be in combat because they are somebody’s mother.”)
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The Gender Regime of the US Economy
In 2006, American women earned 81% of men’s wages. They worked an average of 36 hours/wk (compared to men’s 42). Among married heterosexual couples, women contributed only 35 percent of the family income in 2005. Yet, 25.5% of women in two earner heterosexual couples earned more than the men (2005). Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. Women in the Labor Force: A Databook (2007 Edition). Available at:
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The Gender Regime of the US Politics
Women are under-represented in US politics The US ranks below the OECD average for the percentage of women in its national parliament
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The Gender Regime of the US Politics
Women comprise a higher percentage of state and local officials in the US. In 2008, women comprised 23.8% of all statewide elective executive offices across the country (still below the 30% goal set by the UN and found be “critical mass” for having an impact.) In State Legislature in 2008, women comprised 23.7% of state legislators in the United States. Since 1971, the number of women serving in state legislatures has more than quintupled. Source: Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute, Rutgers University.
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The Gender Regime of the US Summary
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The Gender Regime of the US Sources
Bureau of Labor Statistics Women in the Labor Force: A Databook (2007 Edition). Available at: Center for American Women and Politics “Women in Elective Office 2008.” Center for American Women and Politics. Eagleton Institute. Rutgers University. Available at: Crittenden, Ann The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World Is Still the Least Valued. New York: Henry Holt & Co.
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The Gender Regime of the US Sources
Dye Lawler, Jane Fertility of American Women: June 2004. Current Population Reports. US Department of Commerce. Department of Labor. US Census Bureau. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office. Available at: Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics America's Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being, 2007. Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Available at: Merriam-Webster On-line Entry for Patriarchy. Accessed June 10, 2008. Available at:
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The Gender Regime of the US Sources
U.S. Census Bureau Statistical Abstract of the United States: Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office. Available at:
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