Article The Paradox of Women’s Rights in Peru
Article The Paradox of Women’s Rights in Peru
Quote:According to the SDG Gender Index, Peru scores 72.9 for “Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments,” a figure that suggests progress, visibility, and leadership. And yet, when we shift our gaze to health, the score drastically drops to 35.5, barely half. Women are present in Congress, but absent from the healthcare system that should protect them.
If political participation alone were enough, our streets would be safer, our hospitals accessible, and our voices heard beyond the voting booth. But in Peru, as in much of Latin America, representation has not broken the chains of inequality — it has simply made them less visible to those who govern.
https://www.newsgram.com/women-empowerment/2025/10/06/paradox-of-womens-rights-in-peru
https://archive.ph/wdA7z
Quote:According to the SDG Gender Index, Peru scores 72.9 for “Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments,” a figure that suggests progress, visibility, and leadership. And yet, when we shift our gaze to health, the score drastically drops to 35.5, barely half. Women are present in Congress, but absent from the healthcare system that should protect them.
If political participation alone were enough, our streets would be safer, our hospitals accessible, and our voices heard beyond the voting booth. But in Peru, as in much of Latin America, representation has not broken the chains of inequality — it has simply made them less visible to those who govern.
Quote:Representation matters. But it is only the beginning.
While the results of better ("more equal") representation in institutional systems is a good thing, like this article points out it, it is not the only thing.
My core guiding statement in regards to feminism is just "women are human." All I would like the world to acknowledge is that women are human beings. I feel like when that happens, the rest should fall into place.
To me, equal representation in bureaucratic systems/political institutions is part of a two-pronged approach to getting people to recognize women are human. Since women are human, and since we make up roughly 50% of the human population, we absolutely should be included at least 50% on all governing an institutional systems. 50% of the opinions should be coming from one of the two halves of the human population. This is just one thing though.
Quote:Representation matters. But it is only the beginning.