Gender Attitudes and Perceptions among Young People in Georgia
Gender Attitudes and Perceptions among Young People in Georgia
Author(s): Elene Japaridze, Nina Zhghenti, Maia Barkaia, Mariam Amashukeli
Subject(s): Gender Studies
Published by: CSS - Center for Social Sciences
Summary/Abstract: The issue of gender equality has been overlooked by international organisations and local non-governmental organizations in Georgia. However, local and international communities have made pronounced progress with regard to raising awareness of gender issues through educational activities. Additional aspects of democracy-building have been introduced with gender equality. Many studies have demonstrated that young people represent a progressive force in social change and in the transformation of social and cultural meanings that lead to more liberal attitudes towards gender roles. Current literature also suggests that a number of factors, including gender, education, the type of settlement, employment and religion, influence the understanding of gender equality and gender roles in families and in society. Therefore, the aim of this paper is twofold: a) to determine whether young people have more liberal attitudes regarding a range of gender issues; and b) to examine the determinants of these gender attitudes. The paper supports the recommendations that Georgia received from the UN Human Rights Council in 2011 regarding the elimination of stereotypes (UN Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review Mechanism and the Gender Perspective 2011). This paper briefly reviews the relevant literature and the Georgian context in which our hypotheses are presented. This review is followed by a description of our methodology. This paper concludes with results and discussion.
Series: CSS - Working Papers
- Page Count: 22
- Publication Year: 2013
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF