The Diplomat
Overview
Women’s Rights in Asia
Associated Press, Aijaz Rahi
Cover Story

Women’s Rights in Asia

In the years after #MeToo and COVID-19, is the situation for women in Asia getting better or worse?

By Lü Pin, Swarna Rajagopalan, Xeniya Udod and Patricia O'Brien

It’s been five years since the “#MeToo Movement” denouncing sexual harrassment and sexual assult swept across the globe, including the Asia-Pacific. And it’s been nearly three years since the COVID-19 pandemic hit, with its knock-on effects exacerbating gender issues from domestic violence to gaps in pay and employment. Amid these countervailing yet intersecting trends, is the situation for women in Asia getting better or worse? That’s what we wanted to explore in this cover.

We sought to approach that question through a series of case studies, not addressing “Asia” as a whole but instead focusing on a few specific countries from across the Asia-Pacific: China, India, Kazakhstan, and Papua New Guinea (discussed in order of their populations, from most to least). We asked each section author if women’s rights in these countries are getting better or worse. Many of them replied that it was a difficult question to answer, since women’s experiences even within one country are incredibly varied.

Overall, the answers paint a picture of entrenched patriarchy in the four sample countries – coupled, however, with the bravery of women’s activists continuing to push for progress.

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The Authors

Lü Pin is a Chinese feminist activist and columnist who served as the founding editor-in-chief of Feminist Voices. She is currently a Ph.D. student in Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

Swarna Rajagopalan is a political scientist by training, a peace educator by vocation and founded an NGO, Prajnya (prajnya.in), that works for gender equality. 

Xeniya Udod is a journalist, gender researcher, and co-founding expert with Central Asian feminist organization FemAgora.

Patricia O’Brien is a faculty member in Asian Studies at Georgetown University and in the Department of Pacific Affairs, Australian National University, and is Adjunct Faculty in the Pacific Partners Initiative at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), Washington, D.C.

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