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In the eyes of some people, gender equality is already well advanced and thus no longer a central issue.
Even if it is true that women were given the right to vote as early as 1944 and have had the right to work without their husbands’ permission since 1965. It is also true that men are paid 23.5% more, on average, than women, the gap being 12.8% for equivalent working time and occupation (source: Observatoire des inégalités), that despite the same average age on obtaining a doctorate, women are recruited on average 9 months later, a gap that widens considerably in the transition from lecturer (MCF) to tenured professor (PR) (43 years for men; 47 years for women).
In other words:
The principle of gender equality is universally accepted. It is enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and in the French Constitution of 1946 (Preamble: it guarantees women equal rights with men in all fields.)
Genuine gender equality is yet to be achieved. Such equality would consist in ensuring that women and men have access to the same rights, material conditions, resources, education, employment, political responsibilities, care, etc. Any inequality of treatment in such areas, if due in particular to gender, is considered discrimination (article 225-1 of the French Criminal Code).
Working towards gender equality, in 2016, is therefore still largely about combating discrimination against women, inequalities that are decreasing only very slowly or even increasing (at the current rate, it would take until 2186 for wage inequalities to be eliminated).
With the appointment in 2014 of a Deputy Vice-President in charge of gender equality, the University of Poitiers actively committed itself to promoting gender equality, combating gender stereotypes, inequalities and discrimination linked to gender or sex, and acting against harassment at the University, whether among students, administrative and technical staff or lecturers/researchers.
On 24 April 2015, the Board of Directors of the University of Poitiers unanimously adopted the “Charter for Equality between Women and Men“, which urges universities to:
Actions carried out or in progress since 2014:
Progressive implementation of non-sexist, non-discriminatory, non-stereotypical communication tools (see section “The weight of words”)