5 countries with the highest status of women Men don't dare to do anything to women easily
According to the data released in the third edition of the Global Women's Safety Index, the gap in women's social status continues to widen around the world, and at the end of 2021, the United Nations released a survey results, and the bottom five countries are: Norway, Finland, Iceland, Denmark, Luxembourg, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Pakistan, Iraq, the least popular with women.
The study, which surveyed 220,000 women in 170 countries, produced a preliminary index based on information on local judicial transparency, law and order, benefits and remuneration for work. In this area, any discrimination against women, such as legal discrimination, such as intolerance of women, domestic violence, etc., must be deducted from the relevant points as the final ranking.
As a result, among the top five women in the world, few men will do anything to women, and no male leader will do anything to female employees, otherwise it is easy to be punished and imprisoned. Moreover, they are "responsive" to any request they make.
Top of the list: Norway.
Norway passed the Gender Equality Act in 2002, which provides comprehensive protection for women's welfare based on more than a dozen aspects such as gender, pregnancy (childbirth and adoption), race, religion, disability, age, work, medical care, education, psychology, etc., and even three years after the implementation of the bill, a Norwegian company was fined NOK 2 million for labeling employees as "men only".
Norway re-enacted the Equality and Anti-Discrimination Act in 2018 to reduce the gap between men and women, including refugee women, approved the establishment of women's rights groups, and required more positions for women in businesses and institutions.
Norwegian women have a good welfare, simply put, they can live a prosperous life without having to work for the rest of their lives, if they want children.
My Norwegian friend Mina told me that Norwegian women are limited to 35 hours a week (37 for men).5 hours), 80% of whom work in a stable public sector with many holidays;If there is a job, they are visited immediately, or they provide free technical training or are referred to various jobs until the women find a job again.
A woman's first child has 9 weeks of paid leave, the father's child has 47 weeks of full salary, or 57 weeks of 80% of the salary (10% for the second child, etc., there is no upper limit), 3,300 kroner per month until the child reaches the age of two, all the children are taken care of, and by the time of the eighteenth year, 1,000 kren per month.
Therefore, men in Norway often joke that at home, children come second, women come second, elderly people come third, pets come last, and men come last.
At No. 2 in the ranking of women in the world is Finland.
Finnish women were given the right to vote in 1906, the first female minister was born in 1926, the first female ** was born in 2000 (and was re-elected), and in 2011 there were 42 in the Finnish Parliament5% of female members of parliament, as well as the first female prime minister (at the age of 31), were born in 2006. In the 2007 year, there were more women ministers than men in the Finnish cabinet (12-8), which is a rare situation.
All of this goes back to a feminist campaign in 1970, when a Finnish woman sued her husband for being **** in a marriage, which was eventually ruled illegal by a court, and thousands of women took to the streets to demonstrate, declaring that if they did not get a fair verdict, they would give up all household chores, even the birth of a child. Eventually, the judge was pressured to issue a public apology in the newspaper, and Finnish women took the opportunity to pass the Women's Law to extend maternity leave to 263 days (paid).
Women also have a high social status in Finland, both in life and at work. When a Finnish woman marries, she cannot use her husband's surname according to the legal surname;Companies with more than 30 employees should have gender equality and pay equity programmes;Women volunteer (men are mandatory) and are free to choose their training programmes during their service.
In Finland, 90% of men take on their own initiative, while Finnish women show their tolerance for men by not giving seats to their children on Women's Day.
Ranked 3rd in the world for the status of women: Iceland.
Iceland was the first to allow women to have full inheritance of property, whereas until the fifties of the nineteenth century, Icelandic women had access to only 1 3 property, and in 1917, divorced women had custody of their children. In 2000, Iceland was the first country to pass the Gender Equality Act, which stipulates that women must not be less than 40% of companies and boards of directors, and by 2021, the proportion of women in corporate leadership positions in Iceland had reached 42%, and 40% in Parliament had reached 40%.
Despite the country's small population, Icelandic men have an infinite tolerance and tolerance towards women. Dissatisfaction with politics and the remuneration of work led to a large march on International Labor Day in 1975, and Iceland's ** immediately stated that women could also run for election. So far, after five years, the first Icelandic woman** has been successfully elected, and it has been 16 years since then.
Since the first Icelandic female prime minister took office in 2009, Icelandic men have chosen to "lie flat" in front of women's interests and claims, and many incredible "special bills" have been introduced. For example, a man cannot go to a bathhouse without the permission of the woman;It is an offence to strike up to a woman on the street and a fine of SEK 10,000. Maternity leave for women has been extended from 90 to 300 days, during which time women are paid 80 per cent of their monthly wages. What's even stranger is that even the formless and insubstantial ice and snow spirits have genders.
Icelandic women are still very tolerant of men, especially they don't ask too much, even watching movies, traveling are equal, and even the house and car are paid by her.
No. 4 women: Denmark.
Denmark is the only advanced nation in the world known as a "matriarchal society", and Danish men often ridicule themselves with "the best should protect men", and the first in the world to establish a "men's rights association" and set up two men's shelters. According to records, on the first day of the shelter's opening, more than 700 male refugees came here, some divorced, some beaten, some scolded, some bankrupt, some unemployed, all with free room and board, and received a subsidy of 55,000 kilograms a year.
The strength of Danish women began in 187, when a general strike involving 50,000 women caused Danish men to complain, and after 22 days of hard work, Danish men began to "lie flat": If you have the guts, I will agree to your request. Denmark would gladly accept any offer from those women.
Danish women were granted the right to vote in 1887 and were on the road to the "pinnacle of life". In fact, every major city in Denmark will have a female mayor, and Denmark** will also have a female prime minister. The current prime minister was born in 1977, his parents were painters and his mother was a primary school teacher, but she entered politics since her graduate days, at the age of twenty-four she was already the mayor of Copenhagen, at the age of thirty-four she was already a Minister of Labour, at the age of thirty-seven she was already a Minister of Justice, and in 2019 she became Denmark's youngest ever prime minister at the age of 42.
In the face of so many powerful women, the mental burden of Danish men is also increasing, and Danish men are alcoholic, drug-addicted, and even commit suicide because of domestic violence.
5th ranked woman: Luxembourg.
In the past, the status of women in Luxembourg has been criticized by European countries, such as women cannot participate in politics and cannot hold the position of ***, which makes Luxembourg one of the most popular countries in the world, which can no longer be compared with the rest of Europe. With the intervention of the European Union, Luxembourg first adopted the Gender Equality Act in 2008 and, in accordance with the well-being of Nordic women, consulted 19 ministries for 104 anti-women statutes on women, which by 2018 had reached 937%, from the worst woman in Europe to the fifth most powerful country in the world.
The social status of Luxembourg women in all spheres has been improved, and harassment in the workplace, wage differentials, and domestic violence, including domestic violence, are punishable by high fines and in serious cases can be punished with imprisonment for up to 15 years.