Google – AFP, 25 Sep 2013
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Women sell
llama meat at a stall in a public market in La Paz, Bolivia
(AFP/File, Aizar
Raldes)
|
WASHINGTON
— At least 15 countries give husbands the power to prevent their wives from
working, the World Bank said in a report on gender equality in business.
"Many
societies have made progress, gradually moving to dismantle ingrained forms of
discrimination against women. Yet a great deal remains to be done," said
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim in the preface to the report.
Among 143
countries covered in the report "Women, Business and the Law 2014",
15 -- including Iran, Syria, Bolivia and Gabon -- give men the right to object
to and prevent their wives from taking jobs.
In 79
countries, laws restrict the kind of work women can do, the report said.
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Fifteen
countries, including Iran, give
men the right to object to and prevent
their
wives from taking jobs (AFP/File,
Atta Kenare)
|
In the
Republic of Guinea, it said, a wife can fight her husband's decision in court,
but she must prove that it is unjustified to have his decision overturned.
Such rules
remain in part due to history.
"Vestiges
of history remain codified in certain economies simply because legislation such
as the Code Napoleon was adopted wholesale and not regularly reviewed or
updated.
"The
notion of head of household, for example, was removed from France's Civil Code
in 1970 but persists in many civil codes throughout West Africa."
In Russia,
women are banned from 456 professions, including drivers of farm trucks,
conducting freight trains and woodworking.
Many of
those rules were inherited from the former communist regime of the Soviet Union
and were left unchang ed.
One result,
the report said, was that the Russian Federation had a high earnings difference
between genders during the transition to a market economy.
But at
least 29 countries, including Saudi Arabia, Honduras and Senegal, have laws
that systematically establish men has family heads giving them powers over
crucial decisions such as where to live, obtaining important documents like
passports, or opening bank accounts.
![]() |
A woman
merchant in Libreville, Gabon
(AFP/File, Wils Yanick Maniengui)
|
But the
report notes that developed Western countries have also been slow to change
their rules. Permission for women to launch their own court cases without their
husbands' permission came in Spain only in 1981 and, in Switzerland, in 1984.
Progress
continues, according to the report. In two years, 48 legal changes increased
gender parity in 44 countries, including Ivory Coast's 2013 decision to allow
women to work without their husband's permission.




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