Social Sciences, asked by omkardattatraykulkar, 10 months ago

Low passed for liberation and progress of womens

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4

Explanation:

The Woman Liberalization Movement was passed in year of 1960. This act was continued to the year 1980 which was passed only in few industrialized nations. There were several countries who founded the British Colonial System and so married woman belonging from this region was banned to have sex with their husbands.

Answered by VaibhavVerma71
1

Answer:

Since 1960, women have gained tremendous social benefits. The benefits at work have been very impressive. By the 1970s, the number of working women had increased by 42 percent, and most of the increase was in what was traditionally considered a “masculine” and professional profession. The percentage of female attorneys increased by 9 percent, professors by 6 percent, and doctors by 3.6 percent. In 1986, women comprised 15 percent of state lawyers, 40 percent of all computer program managers, and 29 percent of state and executive managers.

Hot benefits in graduate and graduate education have been found. Today, for the first time in American history, women make up the bulk of the nation's college students, and almost as many women as men receive master's degrees. In addition, the number of female students graduating from professional schools - including dentistry, law, and medicine - increased dramatically, from 1,425 in 1966 to more than 20,000 in the early 1990s. Women comprise about a third of students studying in law school and medical school.

Women also received surprising political benefits. In 1993, there were 1,524 women working in public offices, in the United States Congress, or in the state Legislatures. In 1984, for the first time, a major political party appointed a woman, Geraldine Ferraro, to be president. In 1994, two women, Ruth Bader Ginzburg and Sandra Day O'Connor, served on the Supreme Court, while another 1,524 women served in the United States Congress or state legislatures.

Despite all the findings, but problems remain. Most women today continue to work with a small number of traditional "female" jobs, while a full-time female worker earns only 68 cents on a $ 1 salary paid for men. Of particular concern is the fact that most women live in poverty. The "feminization of the hurricane" was one of the growing trends of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. Today, almost half of all marriages end in divorce and many others end up in legal divorce and divorce - and the economic hardships of these women are often in crisis. Households headed by women are four and a half times as likely to be poor as male-headed households. Although female-headed households make up only 15 percent of the U.S. population, more than 50 percent of the population is poor.

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