Do women make a difference in government and Parliament?

HM king-N Minesters (3)
(File photo: Jordan News)
HM king-N Minesters (3)

Ruba Saqr

The writer has reported on the environment, worked in the public sector as a communications officer, and served as managing editor of a business magazine, spokesperson for a humanitarian INGO, and as head of a PR agency.

Now that Jordan has five women ministers in the Cabinet and 10 women lawmakers in the Senate (in addition to 16 women MPs in the Lower House), should the Kingdom’s female population expect social justice for all women — including working mothers and homemakers — at the grassroots level?اضافة اعلان

Judging from the way the Child Rights Law for the year 2022 has morphed from an ambitious bill that protects children from abuse and exploitation to a maimed law that strips mothers of their natural right to have a say in their children’s education, it is hard to imagine that the country’s “trickle-down” feminism will actually work without a complementary bottom-up approach.

Incidentally, the word “feminism” can rub the conservative factions of society the wrong way. The government has been using the tamer term of “women empowerment” to celebrate the addition of three more women to the Khasawneh government, as part of last Thursday’s reshuffle, the fifth in two years. As a result, government now has a total of five women ministers (up from two), out of a total of 27 top-tier government officials.

This week, local news outlets also posted a couple of stories to underscore the fact that women now make up around 15 percent of the Senate, which was dissolved and then reinstated on Sunday, as Parliament’s ordinary session is about to convene, as of November 13. This brings the total number of women representation to 10 out of 65 in the Upper House (up from six). Notably, the elected Lower House has 16 women lawmakers out of a total of 130.

All things considered, more women in power is not likely to compensate for a piece of legislation that excludes mothers from expressing their opinions with regards to their children’s school life, as per Article 17 of the newly endorsed Child Rights Law.

Women in leadership positions were actually part of the legislative process that resulted in the unfortunate enactment of this excessively patriarchal law. Jordan probably needs other measures besides an increase in women representation in the legislative and executive branches of government to fix the foundational problems facing its democracy.
Jordan needs a strong, well-structured and well-informed civil society to learn from this experience, in hopes of finding solutions to the discriminatory political structures that prohibit the endorsement of equitable laws that protect women and children from bias and bigotry.
For starters, the civil society has been completely marginalized throughout the enactment process, in favor of Jordan’s classical conservative institutions, which extend far beyond the influential Islamist political parties.

In fact, according to sources, civil society activists that criticize (and partially defend) the child rights bill came together in a panic as a reaction to the widespread Islamist-led accusations that painted the draft law as the brainchild of “foreign agendas”.

This reveals an important observation about the local political landscape: centrist-to-liberal voices in Jordan are often unorganized, ad hoc and sporadic, while conservatism (including its most moderate of shades) is backed by a steep institutional heritage that determines almost all altitudes on the political scene.

It is only natural for conservative points of view to win, since they are more organized and definitely more experienced. They are also fully integrated within the country’s power structures, while women are often marginalized and routinely mistreated.

Unlike women and their allies, conservative voices occupy every level of the socio-political order, from the grassroots all the way up to the higher spheres of the political hierarchy.

Women, on the other hand, are often cosmetically introduced in the upper echelons of the political structure (often in leadership positions), but remain gravely disempowered at the grassroots level.

During Parliament’s extraordinary session, which ran from July to October, Jordan had a total of 24 women in the Cabinet, and both houses of Parliament. Today, the number is 31. During Parliament’s extraordinary session, the number of women lawmakers who were directly involved in the adoption of the Child Rights Law was 17: 12 MPs and five Senators.

As the child rights law faced an onslaught of false accusations that it veers away from Islamic Sharia to dismantle the nuclear family, the Lower House joint committee tasked with “fixing” the law received feedback from two shades of the local socio-political spectrum: the highly organized conservatives and the hastily assembled centrist liberals.

The committee of 22 MPs, with more than half women (12 to be exact), decided to incorporate the comments they received from the conservatives to contain misinformed public objections to the law. The mixed-gender panel also chose to ignore well-written legal analysis offered by moderately liberal lawyers and activists who advocated for a balanced law that empowers both men and women in decisions pertaining to children and their education.
An empowered civil society that handles advocacy and campaigning professionally is more likely to influence policies and laws affecting social justice, women and children than women leaders working against a strong and institutionalized patriarchal current.
Parliament bowed to pressure from the Iftaa’ Council, which has the right by law to study draft laws and regulations so as to offer an opinion based on Islamic Sharia. The council demanded an amendment to Article 17, among other provisions, whereby the word “parents” was substituted with “wali” (male guardian). Ironically, this provision is about family participation in school processes and decisions to enhance the educational experience of children. The law now gives this right to men and strips it away from women, who are typically the ones most involved in their children’s school life.

In an alarming sign that civil society might be on its deathbed, no study has been released so far to analyze the absurd journey of the Child Rights Law through what could be described as a messy ratification process marred by the government’s inability to face misinformation and disinformation campaigns in a professional and effective manner.

Jordan needs a strong, well-structured and well-informed civil society to learn from this experience, in hopes of finding solutions to the discriminatory political structures that prohibit the endorsement of equitable laws that protect women and children from bias and bigotry.

Unfortunately, civil society organizations have long been demonized and wrongfully accused of serving as a conduit for conspiratorial “foreign agendas”. This kind of stigmatizing narrative is convenient to the local political powers that want to maintain the status quo, all the while cementing the control of Jordan’s current power structures.

In the long run, top-down women empowerment is unlikely to be effective without women participation at the grassroots level. An empowered civil society that handles advocacy and campaigning professionally is more likely to influence policies and laws affecting social justice, women and children than women leaders working against a strong and institutionalized patriarchal current.


Ruba Saqr has reported on the environment, worked in the public sector as a communications officer, and served as managing editor of a business magazine, spokesperson for a humanitarian INGO, and as head of a PR agency.


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