DR.
VANDANA SHIVA: THE CONNECTION BETWEEN GLOBAL ECONOMIC POLICY AND
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
by
Dr. Vandana Shiva
3
January, 2012
The
brave and courageous Delhi gang rape victim breathed her last on
December 30, 2012. This article is a tribute to her and other victims
of violence against women.
Violence
against women is as old as patriarchy. But it has intensified and
become more pervasive in the recent past. It has taken on more brutal
forms, like the death of the Delhi gang rape victim and the suicide
of the 17-year-old rape victim in Chandigarh.
Rape
cases and cases of violence against women have increased over the
years. The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) reported 10,068 rape
cases in 1990 which increased to 16,496 in 2000. With 24,206 cases in
2011, rape cases jumped to incredible increase of 873 percent from
1971 when NCRB started to record cases of rape. And New Delhi has
emerged as the rape capital of India, accounting for 25 percent
cases.
The
movement to stop this violence must be sustained till justice is done
for every one of our daughters and sisters who has been violated.
And
while we intensify our struggle for justice for women, we need to
also ask why rape cases have increased 240 percent since 1990s when
the new economic policies were introduced. We need to examine the
roots of the growing violence against women.
Could
there be a connection between the growth of violent, undemocratically
imposed, unjust and unfair economic policies and the growth of crimes
against women?
I
believe there is.
Contributions
of women
Firstly,
the economic model focusing myopically on "growth" begins
with violence against women by discounting their contribution to the
economy.
The
more the government talks ad nauseam about "inclusive growth"
and "financial inclusion", the more it excludes the
contributions of women to the economy and society. According to
patriarchal economic models, production for sustenance is counted as
"non-production". The transformation of value into
disvalue, labour into non-labour, knowledge into non-knowledge, is
achieved by the most powerful number that rules our lives, the
patriarchal construct of GDP, Gross Domestic Product, which
commentators have started to call the Gross Domestic Problem.
National
accounting systems which are used for calculating growth as GDP are
based on the assumption that if producers consume what they produce,
they do not in fact produce at all, because they fall outside the
production boundary.
The
production boundary is a political creation that, in its workings,
excludes regenerative and renewable production cycles from the area
of production. Hence, all women who produce for their families,
children, community and society are treated as "non-productive"
and "economically" inactive. When economies are confined to
the market place, economic self-sufficiency is perceived as economic
deficiency. The devaluation of women's work, and of work done in
subsistence economies of the South, is the natural outcome of a
production boundary constructed by capitalist patriarchy.
By
restricting itself to the values of the market economy, as defined by
capitalist patriarchy, the production boundary ignores economic value
in the two vital economies which are necessary to ecological and
human survival. They are the areas of nature's economy and sustenance
economy. In nature's economy and sustenance economy, economic value
is a measure of how the earth's life and human life are protected.
Its currency is life giving processes, not cash or the market price.
Secondly,
a model of capitalist patriarchy which excludes women's work and
wealth creation in the mind deepens the violence by displacing women
from their livelihoods and alienating them from the natural resources
on which their livelihoods depend - their land, their forests, their
water, their seeds and biodiversity. Economic reforms based on the
idea of limitless growth in a limited world can only be maintained by
the powerful grabbing the resources of the vulnerable. The resource
grab that is essential for "growth" creates a culture of
rape - the rape of the earth, of local self-reliant economies, the
rape of women. The only way in which this "growth" is
"inclusive" is by its inclusion of ever larger numbers in
its circle of violence.
I
have repeatedly stressed that the rape of the Earth and rape of women
are intimately linked, both metaphorically in shaping worldviews and
materially in shaping women's everyday lives. The deepening economic
vulnerability of women makes them more vulnerable to all forms of
violence, including sexual assault, as we found out during a series
of public hearings on the impact of economic reforms on women
organised by the National Commission on Women and the Research
Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology.
Subversion
of democracy
Thirdly,
economic reforms lead to the subversion of democracy and
privatisation of government. Economic systems influence political
systems. The government talks of economic reforms as if they have
nothing to do with politics and power. They talk of keeping politics
out of economics, even while they impose an economic model shaped by
the politics of a particular gender and class. Neoliberal reforms
work against democracy. We have seen this recently in the government
pushing through "reforms" to bring in Walmart through FDI
in retail. Corporate-driven reforms create a convergence or economic
and political power, deepening of inequalities and a growing
separation of the political class from the will of the people they
are supposed to represent. This is at the root of disconnect between
politicians and the public which we experienced during the protests
that have grown since the Delhi gang rape.
"An
economics of commodification creates a culture of commodification,
where everything has a price and nothing has value."
Worse,
an alienated political class is afraid of its own citizens. This is
what explains the increasing use of police to crush non-violent
citizen protests as we have witnessed in New Delhi. Or in the torture
of Soni Sori in Bastar. Or in the arrest of Dayamani Barla in
Jharkhand. Or the thousands of cases against the communities
struggling against the nuclear power plant in Kudankulam. A
privatised corporate state must rapidly become a police state.
This
is why politicians must surround themselves with ever increasing VIP
security, diverting the police from their important duties to protect
women and ordinary citizens.
Fourthly,
the economic model shaped by capitalist patriarchy is based on the
commodification of everything, including women. When we stopped the
WTO Ministerial in Seattle, our slogan was "Our world is not for
Sale".
An
economics of deregulation of commerce, of privatisation and
commodification of seeds and food, land and water, women and children
unleashed by economic liberalisation, degrades social values, deepens
patriarchy and intensifies violence against women.
Economic
systems influence culture and social values. An economics of
commodification creates a culture of commodification, where
everything has a price and nothing has value.
The
growing culture of rape is a social externality of economic reforms.
We need to institutionalise social audits of the neo-liberal policies
which are a central instrument of patriarchy in our times. If there
was a social audit of corporatising our seed sector, 270,000 farmers
would not have been pushed to suicide in India since the new economic
policies were introduced. If there was a social audit of the
corporatisation of our food and agriculture, we would not have every
fourth Indian going hungry, every third woman malnourished and every
second child wasted and stunted due to severe malnutrition. India
today would not be Republic of Hunger that Dr Utsa Patnaik has
written about.
The
victim of the Delhi gang rape has triggered a social revolution. We
must sustain it, deepen it, expand it. We must demand and get speedy
and effective justice for women. We must call for fast track courts
to convict those responsible for crimes against women. We must make
sure laws are changed so justice is not elusive for victims of sexual
violence. We must continue the demand for blacklisting of politicians
with criminal records.
And
while we do all this, we need to change the ruling paradigm which is
imposed on us in the name of "growth" and which is fuelling
increasing crimes against women. Ending violence against women
includes moving beyond the violent economy shaped by capitalist
patriarchy to non-violent peaceful economies which give respect to
women and the Earth.
Dr
Vandana Shiva is a physicist, ecofeminist, philosopher, activist, and
author of more than 20 books and 500 papers. She is the founder of
the Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology, and has
campaigned for biodiversity, conservation and farmers' rights -
winning the Right Livelihood Award (Alternative Nobel Prize) in 1993.
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