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Iran: Does Government Fear
Educated Women?
By:Iraj Gorgin
February 10, 2008 - (RadioFreeEurope) Who’s
afraid of girls? The Iranian government, it seems. Recent years
have seen a dramatic rise in the number of Iranian girls enrolling
in universities and other institutions of higher education. While
many governments would see this as a blessing worth boasting about,
that's not the case in Iran.
In a report to the administration of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad,
Iran’s Research Center of the Majlis (parliament) recently
called the trend of more girls going to universities "alarming"
and urged the government to stop it.
'Worrisome Trend"
"With the door of opportunity closed to most young girls, with
all the control their families and others exert over them, young
women are mostly going after knowledge and science to gain freedom
and human dignity."
The research center documented what it called a worrisome rise in
the number of females to enroll in universities and other centers
of higher education. The report said that over the last two decades
there’s been a 23 percent increase in the number of girls
taking university entrance exams, with the number of girls who passed
the tests nearly doubling -- to 65 percent -- over the same period.
The influential research center - which has decision-making powers
in both parliament as well as in government agencies - also warned
that the rise in female students could eventually lead to "social
disparity and economic and cultural imbalances between men and women."
But others see society as the problem, not women's desire to seek
higher education.
"If such concern [about more women going to universities] is
being expressed, then it’s because our society is not ready
to accept that a woman could be more educated than a man,"
said Elahe Hejazi, a university professor in Tehran. She tells RFE/RL’s
Radio Farda that the report reflects both traditional gender discrimination
as well as despair among young males about their prospects in life.
She calls it a "cultural problem."
"Our culture is preserved in its traditional form, but the
more important problem in our society is that boys have no motivation
for continuing their education," she said.
Detrimental Or Good?
The report says the rise in female students has created other concerns,
such as "securing university dorms and maintaining their [girls]
physical security in confronting possible social perils." Another
problem, according to the report, is economic, "such as the
possibility that expenses will be underused for specialized skills,
as well as a change in the gender of the workforce."
The center's report also warns about a detrimental affect on families
and urges officials to swiftly find a solution to the "disproportion
between the number of men and women" in Iran’s universities.
Shahla Shafigh, an Iranian-born women’s rights activist in
Paris, tells Radio Farda that she believes the opposition to female
students is ideological.
"With the door of opportunity closed to most young girls, with
all the control their families and others exert over them, young
women are mostly going after knowledge and science to gain freedom
and human dignity," Shafigh says. "And this is a good
thing to happen in a country."
But what steps the government might take in regards to the situation
is unclear.
Last year, after reports that the government might limit female
enrollment in entrance exams, women’s rights activists in
Iran expressed concern. The government later denied that there had
ever been any such plans.
But there are signs the government intends to act on the gender
issue, including recent media reports suggesting there could be
a change in textbooks based on "gender differentiation."
Last week, Zohre Tabibzadeh Nouri, who runs the government's office
of Women’s Participation, told reporters in Tehran that "gender
discrimination" will be implemented in certain sectors of the
workforce. She added that the government must help women attain
the kind of education and expertise suitable for them.
From:http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2008/02/840f69d6-3914-4f1f-96be-35ade6e6b801.html
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