Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Bringing Attention to Five Important Women’s Issues

In recent months, we’ve heard a lot about women’s issues and their importance. A Congress debates reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act – and allows politics to get in the way of providing important protections for women who are surviving domestic violence – little attention is paid to other important women’s issues. While these particular issues are not always seen as women’s issues, they do disproportionately affect women and children. Unfortunately, many people only see or hear of these issues in random newspaper stories – or when one of them affects someone they love. Reading and hearing stories of women who are living through or have survived these problems can put a human face on them and start bringing the power of people empowerment to bear against them.
Domestic Violence
While domestic violence gets a lot of attention in the newspapers and on the legislative floors, many people still have trouble understanding how women can get trapped in abusive relationships and situations. It’s easy to dismiss domestic violence as something that happens to weak women or women who lack self-esteem. The reality is far more complex, but until we are affected by it personally – either as a victim or because someone we know and love becomes a victim – women will never feel that they can come forward and openly admit that they need help.
Trafficking and Drugs
Cartels that traffic in people and drugs tend to go hand in hand. Whether they are shipping human cargo across the borders to bring undocumented workers into the United States or selling black market babies, these criminals are the modern-day equivalent of slave runners. They spread violence in their wake and use women and children as bargaining chips, slaves, sex workers and domestic workers. It is an enormous underground market run by violent cartels that gets very little attention. Likewise, those criminals that traffic in drugs also victimize women and children, ruining lives left and right. All too often, the children and women victimized by these cartels are further victimized by the legal system which often sees them as criminals rather than victims.
Illegal Adoptions
Illegal adoptions are an offshoot of the human trafficking market. Desperate would-be parents often have no idea of the conditions that birth mothers may be held in. Selling babies on the black market is big business, and women are often treated as little more than breeding livestock. This market is one of the most under-recognized and acknowledged women’s issues of our time.
Internet Love/Money Scams
Women who are victimized by Internet love/money scams are often embarrassed to report the crimes, ashamed to admit that they were so needy or foolish. Few laws exist to deal with these criminals even though they victimize a surprisingly large segment of the population.
These under-reported women’s issues affect a huge segment of the population. Until we see their human face, they’re likely to continue being swept under the rug and forgotten along with the women who are their victims.

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