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Gender Policies in the European Union
Edited by Mariagrazia Rossilli.
Foreword by Louise A. Tilly. Peter Lang
Book Review
Gender Policies in the European Union. Edited by
Mariagrazia Rossilli. Foreword by Louise A. Tilly. Peter Lang
Publishers, New York, Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Boston, Bern, Frankfurt
am Main, Berlin, Brussels, Vienna, Oxford,
2000, 280 pp., $35.95 (paperback).
Reviewed by Carmel L. Rosal, Ph.D.1
The first chapter, written by Mariagrazia Rossilli, outlines the social
policy of the European Community and urges for institutional reforms
to overcome deficits in the exercise of womens political rights.
Published widely in journals and books on international and European
Community policies on women, Mariagrazia Rossilli provides the reader
of this newly released book further opportunity to understand complex
issues about European gender policies. She accomplishes this by putting
together a solid collection of essays written by leading European
feminist scholars. Ilona Olster, Catherine Hoskyns, Eliane Vogel-Polsky,
Joni Lovenduski, Julia Adiba Sohrab, Francesca Bettio, Jill Rubery,
Mark Smith, Myriam Bergamaschi, Jeanne Gregory, Eleonore Kofman, Rosemary
Sales, and Marjan Wijers critically examine the developments in European
Union policy from different feminist perspectives, and offer thought-provoking
answers in the form of alternative policies that can help advance
the democratic reform process in the European Union.
Ilona Olster examines in the second chapter the European Court of
Justices capacity in altering EU equality policies and how policy
changes present an opportunity for Member States in the struggle against
unequal treatment of women in labor market sectors. She argues that
gender policies have developed within the framework of both
negative integration and regulation policies designed to remove market
barriers or to increase marketization (p. 26). The starting
point in Olsters analysis of European gender policies is the
Treaty of Rome. Article 119 came into fruition and was incorporated
into the Treaty of Romes social policy section as a result of
pressure from France. According to Ostner, Article 119 ruled that
each Member State ensured and maintained the application of
the principle that men and women received equal pay for equal work
(p. 28). Ostner traces the development of gender policies in the EU
between 1970 and 2000 and analyzes the impact of various Directives
on industrial relations.
In Chapter 3, Catherine Hoskyns focuses on the changes in womens
rights policy of the European Union. She evaluates the EU womens
policy by focusing on four of the EUs Action Programmes on Equal
Opportunities from 1982 to 2000. Like Ostner in the previous chapter,
Hoskyns mentions the importance of Treaty of Romes Article 119
in the development of equal opportunity law across the European Union
countries. Hoskyns examines each of the EUs four action programmes
in terms of its aim, focus, implementation, and negative an positive
outcomes. She refers to the Action Programmes titled Equal Opportunities
for Women that have developed in the EU as AP1, AP2, AP3, and
AP4, covering periods 1982-1985, 1986-1990, 1991-1995, and 1996-2000
respectively. Hoskyns writes about the emphasis and scope of each
action programme which evolved into broader areas from addressing
the rights of workers (i.e. full-time, part-time, and immigrant women
workers) to the inclusion of men in the equality process. Several
efforts were introduced to advance womens participation in social,
economic, and political domains. For example, expert networks and
training programmes, which were allocated funding by the Commision,
helped in the lobbying efforts of women in position of power to represent
womens interest and to reach out to a larger constituency. Issues
that centred around women who were poor, marginalized, immigrants,
or disadvantaged, Hoskyns observes, have been neglected in policy
implementations. But she points out the problem is being investigated
by a few research studies, funded under AP4, focusing on disadvantaged
or marginalized women. In Hoskyns view, greater gender equality
across the EU can be attained by womens sustained efforts to
participate in decision-making activities with other social groups
in the future.
Elaine Vogel-Polsky, a professor of Labour Law who specializes in
Belgian, comparative, and European and international law, analyses
the connection between gender, power and citizenship, presents some
of the major problems of legal theories on sexual equality, and offers
an updated concept of sexual equality. Although political spheres
in most democratic countries have included womens participation,
this is hindered by their role and status as a subordinated
minority. In Vogel-Polksys view, womens exclusion
from high-level political decision making process can be attributed
to sex difference. To establish equality of men and women in democratic
societies, she notes that parity must be established in societies
where sexuality continues to pose as a hindrance in the balanced operation
of political life and organization. She discusses the notion of parity,
which has entered legal and policy discourse beginning in the late
1980s through the late 1990s, and empirical evidence from researchers,
organizations, and non-governmental organizations showing the negative
consequences of gender. Vogel-Polsky notes that those who argue against
the parity debate seem to think that womens full participation
and active inclusion in political decision
making process is wishful thinking, and that the
exclusion of women from the political sphere is perceived neither
as a central element of the crisis affecting our democracies nor as
an unacceptable failing of democracy (p. 70). She emphasizes
the need for political implementations and democratic procedures based
on the principle of parity to make it possible for men and women to
share political power and responsibilities, and true democracy can
exist under this condition.
Writing from a historical comparative perspective, Joni Lovenduski
examines patterns of womens representation in the context of
contemporary West European politics in Chapter 5. Based on empirical
data from national studies and her decade-long investigation of womens
level of representation in political parties, Lovenduski observes
that sex equality reform was advanced through the efforts of Western
European feminists who pushed for and demanded either increased representation
of women or equality of representation. She cites the increasing trend
in womens representation in Norway and Britain where women who
participated in political organizations promoted the cause by mobilizing
and forming links with other groups to gain momentum. Despite of positive
results to counter the problem of under-representation in political
life, one of the problems pointed out by Lovenduski concerns womens
motivation for seeking political candidacy may be thwarted by political
party systems in different EU countries that operate under political
apprenticeships. For example, some require long party service
as activists, others require particular kinds of economic or employment
expertise, and others seek local ties and knowledge of local issues
(p. 94). Lovenduski examines social change in the context of womens
political roles and political reform process by discussing alterations
in institutions and procedures, womens issues, representation,
and discourse (pp. 99-104). To make a lasting effect in the political
sphere, she concludes that a combination of awareness by the public,
continued and increased involvement of women in political life, and
attitude and behavioral changes by male politicians are necessary
conditions for effective reform.
In Chapter 6, Julia Adiba Sohrab explains why women experience unequal
outcomes when receiving social security benefits when compared to
those received by men in EU Member States. She begins with the EECs
adoption of a Directive (79/70) which supports the equal treatment
of men and women in social security entitlements, and guides its implementation
in Member States. This is extended by the occupational social security
focus of Directive 86/378, which was later amended as Directive 96/97
to provide eligibility criteria for receiving social security benefits.
Sohrab examines the impact of the Equality Directive on three EU Member
States, namely Belgium, Ireland, and the Netherlands, by investigating
the extent of womens financial independence in these Western
European countries. Prior to the implementation of the Equality Directive,
Sohrab notes that women, who were married or cohabitating with male
partners, faced direct discrimination of varying degrees in Belgium,
Ireland, and the Netherlands. One example she cites is the automatic
classification of married women living with their husbands as dependents
in Ireland. But, according to Sohrab, when benefits were extended
to women for the first time, the Belgian, Irish, and Dutch governments
became concerned with the increased costs associated with the reform.
She continues with a definition of equality in Belgium, Ireland,
and the Netherlands based on three criteria: equality of access, equality
of opportunity, and equality of outcome. Since the social security
system in these countries have been based on the notion that the family
is led by a male breadwinner, social security benefit schemes were
designed in favor of men who were more likely to hold full time work
than women. She concludes that further social policy reforms
need to be implemented to address existing inequalities in benefits
received by men and women.
In Chapter 7, Francesca Bettio, Jill Rubery, and Mark Smith provide
a policy oriented discussion and comparative analysis of employment patterns of women and men in the European Union. Considering
the increase in the availability of flexible jobs (i.e. temporary
contract and part time work) in the European Union, the authors note
that these arrangements reproduce familiar gender assymetry
(p. 156). They point out, for example, that female labor
tends to be associated with nonstandard employment (with the exception
of the full-time self-employed) than male labor (p. 125). Discussion
on new employment relations in the EU is organised in two parts. In
the first part, the authors scrutinize various employment relations
and working time arrangements across 15 EU countries, and how these
are linked to labor market organization and employment over the lifecourse
patterns. In the second part, the authors examine, evaluate, and propose
alternatives to three labor flexibility strategies: employer friendly
flexibility, flexibility over the life cycle, and working time reduction.
The authors propose practical solutions so that current policy can
be revised by shifting the focus of labor flexibility arrangement
toward an employee friendly flexibility orientation.
An analysis of trade union womens programmes during the mid-1980s
and late 1990s is the focus of Myriam Bergamaschis essay.
Trade unions key role in helping shape industrial relations
in the European Union is the starting point of her analysis. Marginalization
of women in trade union decision making is one of the major concerns
of women trade union activists and EU women representatives who pushed
for reforms in labor policies. According to Bergamaschi, womens
rights in the workplace, career training, and family and work responsibilities
are issues that must be addressed together in creating equal opportunity
reforms and programs. Some of the trends in womens policy from
the mid-1980s are reviewed and compared by the author, noting the
problem of womens under-representation collective bargaining
and policymaking activities. She points out the importance of gender
democracy in challenging the existing balance of power in trade union
collective bargaining process and equal opportunity policies.
The discovery of sexual harassment in EU Member States
and the capacity of EU institutions in addressing the problem of sexual
harassment are the main themes that Jeanne Gregory explores in Chapter
9. Gregory cites numerous empirical evidence as early as 1980s from
several EU countries where studies have suggested the existence of
sexual harassment in the workplace and its negative consequences in
employer-employee relationship. Although studies, varying from case
studies to large-scale national surveys, have been conducted in Germany,
the Netherlands, Belgium, and France, it was not until the late 1980s
when a report published by Michael Rubinstein showed that no
Member State had any explicit legal prohibition against sexual harassment
and that only in the UK and Ireland had the courts accepted that it
was unlawful sex discrimination (p. 178). Evidence from studies
on sexual harassment strongly suggests that sexual harassment
was an endemic feature of EU labor markets and constituted a serious
impediment to womens inequality (p. 179). Gregory describes
how the roles of the Irish government (early 1990s EU president),
the Council of Ministers, and the European Commission were inextricably
linked in defining and confronting sexual harassment in the workplace.
In her view, the continued commitment of womens groups in Member
States to challenge problem of sexual harassment in the workplace
and sexual violence against women is necessary for social change.
In Chapter 10, Eleonore Kofman and Rosemary Sales explore some of
the issues confronting refugee communities in the European Union,
namely the feminization of immigrant population in Europe in the context
of labor migration and family formation and reunion. Migrant women
encounter difficulties in attaining autonomy and rights when they
enter Europe. Kofman and Sales note that one of the difficulties faced
by a migrant women applying for asylum is when a man and wife
arrive together, the husband is classified as the main applicant,
except in cases where he is severely mentally impaired, which renders
the wife dependent on his status (p. 206). In addition, they
describe the situation faced by thousands of women asylum seekers
who work long hours and earn minimum wage in sweatshops in London.
Lacking the legal right to reside and work in a European country becomes
a precondition for exploitation by employers. Kofman and Sales observe
that efforts by organizations which campaign for the humane treatment
of migrant workers seem to be thwarted by national government and
popular opinion which oppose non-restrictive policies. Marjan Wijers
writes about current developments and debates about European Union
policies on trafficking in women in the last chapter. She points out
that although European Union countries have implemented measures to
confront the problem of trafficking in women, these measures are shrouded
under the cloak of controlling illegal migration and regulating public
order and morality. One of the major problems that confront policy
makers who address the issue of trafficking in women is the lack of
standard definition for trafficking in women. Based on a review
of documents by leading European and international organization including
the European Parliament and the United Nations, Wijers describes how
the definition of trafficking in women has resulted in confusion and
has evolved overtime. She identifies five shifts in the definition
of trafficking in women, which varies from the traditional definition
of forced recruitment of women into prostitution (p. 212)
to the 1990s trend of linking trafficking in women and illegal migration.
Noting two approaches in solving the problem of trafficking in women,
Wijers writes that two modes of strategies can be discernedrepressive
strategies, aimed at suppressing what is considered undesirable
behavior, and empowering strategies, used primarily by NGOs,
aimed at supporting the women and strengthening their positions
(p. 227).
Gender Policies in the European Union is recommended for readers who
are interested in understanding past and recent trends in key policy
developments and policies that address gender inequalities in the
European Union. It provides an excellent overview of the challenges
that the EUs policy makers, gender activists, and feminist writers
have encountered and will continue to face in efforts to reform existing
welfare arrangements and employment patterns. Furthermore, proposals
for implementing key policy changes or extensions in the EU are offered
from diverse feminist perspectives.
Endnotes
1 Foreign Experts Building 70 West Campus, Room 242, Beijing Foreign
Studies University, Beijing 100089, Peoples Republic of China.
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