Sociology, asked by purnimabohara4, 4 months ago

essay on the values held by the traditional Nepalese society in which woman who cannot bear a child is considered to be failure in her personal life and useless in the eyes of the society.Elaborate it​

Answers

Answered by sandeepsaran
0

Answer:

xhxhchchchcucucychdyfufyd

Answered by Itzsweetcookie
2

Explanation:

The status of women in Nepal has varied throughout history. In the early 1990s, like in some other Asian countries, women in Nepal were generally subordinate to men in virtually every aspect of life. Historically, Nepal has predominantly been a patriarchal society where women are generally subordinate to men. Men were considered to be the leader of the family and superior than women. Also, social norms and values were biased in favor of men. This strong bias in favor of sons in society meant that daughters were discriminated against from birth and did not have equal opportunities to achieve all aspects of development.[2] Daughters were deprived of many privileges, including rights, education, healthcare, parental property rights, social status, last rites of dead parents, and were thought to be other's property and liabilities.[3] In the past century, there has been a dramatic positive change in the role and status of women in Nepal, thinning the barrier to gender inequality. While the 1990 Constitution guaranteed fundamental rights to all citizens without discrimination on the basis of ethnicity, caste, religion, or sex, modernizing society along with reach of education to the general population itself has played an important role to promote gender equality.[4] The roles of women have changed in various ways in the modern Nepalese society. Despite the difficult post-conflict transitional context, today, Nepal is not only rapidly progressing towards economic development, it is also achieving targets for poverty and hunger, universal primary education, child mortality, maternal health and gender equality and women's empowerment. Women's representation in the Constituent Assembly has dramatically increased to 29% in the November 2013 elections from 2.9% in 1991 (in the then parliament).[5] Women are now taking leadership roles and participating in decision making at all levels. There has been increased government involvement to increase accountability and monitoring of gender equality commitments and to establish and strengthen linkages between the normative and operational aspects of gender equality and women's empowerment.[5] Today, Nepalese women are defying cultural traditions, and are becoming community leaders, environmentalists politicians and business owners.[6] In October 2015, Nepal Elected its first female president, Bidhya Devi Bhandari.[7] Other famous Nepali women include CNN Hero of the Year winners Anuradha Koirala, Pushpa Basnet, first female to climb Mt. Everest Pasang Lamu Sherpa,international award-winning athletes Mira Rai, Phupu Lhamu Khatri,and first female chief justice Sushila Karki.

Similar questions