Women Politicians Navigating the ‘Hostile Environment’ in Pakistan
This article examines women’s experience of sexual harassment in the political ‘workspace’.
Abstract
Women in Pakistan operate within highly patriarchal contexts that promote their exclusion from public spaces; but those working in politics, the most public of spaces, defy these prevailing gender norms. This article examines women’s experience of sexual harassment in the political ‘workspace’. It presents data from interviews, press and television coverage, social media, and an online survey, to explore how women’s presence in politics is resisted by their male counterparts through the use of sexual harassment. It highlights the sexual harassment men use against women in politics, arguing that key features of political parties’ organisational culture function as predictors of harassment. Despite laws and mechanisms for processing complaints, women in politics are unable to push for effective accountability. The article argues for improved accountability mechanisms within political parties and Assemblies to combat sex discrimination and harassment, while acknowledging that the problem may only increase when women achieve more prominence as politicians.
This work is part of the Action for Empowerment and Accountability (A4EA) Research programme
Citation
Khan, A., Yousuf, Z. and Naqvi, S., (2020) Women Politicians Navigating the ‘Hostile Environment’ in Pakistan in (Tadros, M. and Edwards, J., Eds) Collective Action for Accountability on Sexual Harassment: Global Perspectives, IDS Bulletin 51.2: Brighton: IDS
Link
Women Politicians Navigating the ‘Hostile Environment’ in Pakistan