Iceland: Women’s rights leader?

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In 1975, Icelandic women went on strike to demand equal rights, with 90% of the country’s women participating. The strike had a significant impact, leading to changes such as paternity leave and the election of the world’s first openly gay head of government. Despite progress, women still face inequality globally, with only a small fraction of national leaders being women and many women being denied education.

Sometimes the best way to win a fight is to not fight or do nothing. That lesson was proved perfectly by Icelandic women on October 24, 1975. Demanding equal rights, the townspeople decided that the ideal way to prove their worth was to show men what they were missing, so they stopped working, cooking, cleaning, and even caring. care of their children. The protest was also no small event, as 90% of the country’s women joined. The strike, which included women taking to the streets, has had repercussions across the nation, with schools, businesses and daycare centers closed for the day and fathers having little choice but to take their children with them to the Work. Vigdis Finnbogadottir, who became Iceland’s first female president five years after the strike, told the BBC that day alone – commonly known as “Women’s Day” – changed the nation forever. “What happened that day was the first step for women’s empowerment in Iceland,” she said. “It has completely paralyzed the country and has opened many men’s eyes.” Today, Iceland is known as one of the most progressive nations in Europe. In addition to Finnbogadottir’s election in 1980, the nation soon saw many changes that benefited all people, including the institution of paternity leave for men and the election of the world’s first openly gay head of government, the Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir.

Irregular equality:

The current prime minister of Iceland is a woman: Katrín Jakobsdóttir, who took office in 2017. She is also the president of the Council of Women World Leaders.
Between 1960 and 2015, 108 women became national leaders in 70 countries, although this is only a small fraction of male leadership.
So many women are denied an education that two-thirds of the nearly 800 million illiterate adults in the world are women.




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