Points of Progress: Where women are seeing gains, globally
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1. Canada
The U.S.-based National Women鈥檚 Hockey League announced the opening of a franchise in Toronto, offering hope that women鈥檚 sports will not be abandoned during the pandemic.聽In the middle of national shutdowns, the NWHL has established a new team named the Toronto Six, after the Canadian city鈥檚 nickname. It is the first time the league, formed in 2015 and the first to pay women a salary for playing hockey, will have a presence beyond the U.S. The move is not without critics, but coming a year after the demise of the Canadian Women鈥檚 Hockey League 鈥 for lack of financing 鈥 it will mark a major advance for women in sport when the season opens in late fall.聽
鈥 Sara Miller Llana,聽Staff writer
Why We Wrote This
This is more than feel-good news 鈥 it's where the world is making concrete progress. A roundup of positive stories to inspire you.
2. United States
The U.S. Army Special Forces has welcomed its first female Green Beret, a major milestone for one of the last all-male branches of the Army. Green Berets are considered experts in unconventional warfare and counterterrorism. It鈥檚 against Army Special Operations Command policy to release the names of newly minted soldiers due to 鈥渦nique missions assigned upon graduation,鈥 but the female graduate of Special Forces training has captured media attention.聽A former military intelligence officer, Kathleen Wilder, completed the Army鈥檚 Special Forces Qualification Course back in 1980, but was not allowed to graduate at the time. She filed a sex discrimination complaint and was later sent a graduation certificate. At the July 9 graduation ceremony, Lt. Gen. Fran Beaudette encouraged the new class of 鈥淕reen Beret men and women鈥 to 鈥渟mash through stereotypes, innovate, and achieve the impossible.鈥 (, )听
鈥 Lindsey McGinnis,聽Staff writer
3. Latin America
Latin America is on pace to close its gender gap in 59 years, a huge jump from the 74 years expected in 2018. This puts the region just behind Western Europe, which is expected to close gender disparities in the workforce, education, access to health, and political empowerment in 54 years.聽The World Economic Forum, which issues the annual Global Gender Gap Index, says the sudden advance was due to regional improvements, particularly in political empowerment. Mexico, for example, leaped up the rankings this year after nearly tripling the number of women serving in ministerial positions (15.8% to 42.1%). With local and federal elections slated this year in nations from Chile to Brazil, the region could slash several more years off its journey toward gender equality. ( )
鈥 Whitney Eulich,聽Special correspondent
4. Middle East
Arab women are serving as government ministers in record numbers.聽With women serving in nine of 33 ministerial posts, the United Arab Emirates has the highest ratio of female cabinet members in the Gulf. In December, Kuwait named a record three women as ministers. Saudi Arabia recently appointed women as deputy minister of labor and social development and deputy director-general for alimony affairs 鈥 a first for each role. And 25% of Jordan鈥檚 latest cabinet are women.聽Arab women are not only being better represented in government, but are also rising to significant posts. In January, Lebanese politician Zeina Akar Adra became the Arab world鈥檚 first female defense minister and now helms the country鈥檚 national security efforts and armed forces.聽
鈥 Taylor Luck,聽Special correspondent
5. Nigeria
Nigerian leaders pledge a state of emergency over rape and gender-based violence. After Nigerian women took to the streets en masse in early June to protest a series of high-profile rapes and murders of young women, the country鈥檚 government did something surprising: It listened. In mid-June, Nigeria鈥檚 36 state governors each promised to declare a state of emergency over violence against women, and pledged to start the country鈥檚 first sex offender registry.
While it remains to be seen if they will all come through, activists say they have never before seen this kind of momentum against gender-based violence. 鈥淭his is a generation that says enough is enough,鈥 Chioma Agwuegbo, one of the protests鈥 organizers, told Quartz Africa. ()
鈥 Ryan Lenora Brown,聽Staff writer
6. South Korea
South Korean women are mobilizing around gender rights as never before, making significant gains. The latest advance came during April elections, when more women 鈥 57 鈥 were elected to parliament than at any time since the country democratized in 1987. The ruling Democratic Party enjoyed a landslide victory and now has 30 female legislators. The new Women鈥檚 Party, the country鈥檚 first feminist party, won 200,000 votes but no seats.
South Korea ranks 117th in the world for women鈥檚 political representation. But the country鈥檚 momentum on gender issues is unmistakable, as women鈥檚 gains in education raise pressure for greater equality in the workplace and at home, and younger women help energize a #MeToo movement. ()
鈥 Ann Scott Tyson,聽Staff writer