Women in Bulgaria

Women in Bulgaria refers to women who live in and are from Bulgaria. Women's position in Bulgarian society has been influenced by a variety of cultures and ideologies, including the Byzantine and Ottoman cultures, Eastern Orthodox Christianity, communist ideology, and contemporary globalized Western values.

Women in Bulgaria
Four young Bulgarian women, 2008.
General Statistics
Maternal mortality (per 100,000)11 (2010)
Women in parliament23.8% (2017)[1]
Women over 25 with secondary education90.9% (2010)
Women in labour force58.2% (employment rate Eurostat definition, 2014)[2]
Gender Inequality Index[3]
Value0.210 (2021)
Rank52nd out of 191
Global Gender Gap Index[4]
Value0.740 (2022)
Rank42nd out of 146
Bulgarian girls from Gabra, Sofia Province in traditional attire

Emancipation

Bulgarian women live in a society that is customarily patriarchal. While Bulgaria is often described as a patriarchal society, women may have substantial authority in household budgeting or agricultural decision making. Both men and women have the right to vote and own property. Despite decades of socialist ideology of gender equality, women are often employed in lower paying jobs, remain responsible for most household chores and represent more than half the registered unemployed. Vesna Nikolić-Ristanović points out how at women made up two thirds of the unpaid workers present in Bulgaria during the 1990s.[5] They also occupy public and private leadership positions less frequently than men.[6] In 1996, fewer than 14 percent of post-socialist parliamentary representatives have been women, and only one in five municipal councilors were women in that year.[7] By 2014, women represented 20.4% of the Parliament.[1]

Voting and government

Limited women's suffrage was first granted in 1937,[8] and women obtained full voting rights in 1944.[9] During the communist era, civil rights and freedoms for both women and men were equal, no matter how limited they were due to the authoritarian nature of the government. In 1945 the first women were elected in parliament. Between 1960 and 1990 the number of women in parliament varied between 16% and 21% and in 1990 it dropped down to 8.5%. As of 2017, there were 25.8% women in parliament.[10]

Employment

Many women entered paid employment during the socialist era, when an ideology of gender equality was promoted, and they made up nearly half the workforce in the late twentieth century. Women are frequently employed as teachers, nurses, pharmacists, sales clerks, and laborers, and less often involved in management, administration, and technical sciences. Women are also largely responsible for household tasks—child care, cooking, cleaning, and shopping. Agricultural labor is divided according to gender, with men working with animals and machinery and women doing more hand labor in crop production, although flexibility exists in response to specific situations.[7]

Mariya Stoilova found that women's economic activity in post-socialist Bulgaria was most affected by the age of the women, with older women who were in employment during the socialist system having the lowest rate of economic activity in post-socialist Bulgaria, and while younger women still faced sexist discrimination in employment opportunities, they were more economically active than older age groups of women.[11] Despite this, the gender segregation in the workforce is somewhat less pronounced in Bulgaria than in other European countries.[12] Compared to the European average, Bulgarian women have a higher involvement in traditionally male fields such as science, maths, computing and engineering; and a lower involvement in the service field.[12] Also, the gender pay gap (in 2013) is 13.0% in Bulgaria, which is lower than the European Union average of 16.2%.[12]

As of 2014, the employment rate (age 15–64) for women was 58.2% while for men it was 63.9%.[13] The employment rate for both sexes has been relatively low during the past two decades, due to hardships experienced by the national economy after the fall of the communism. Nevertheless, the exact involvement in the labour force is quite difficult to determine, due to the presence of the unregulated informal sector. According to World Bank, women in 2014 made up 46.6% of the total labour force, pretty much the same as in 1990 (47.9%).[14] Bulgarian women's strong involvement in the economy can be seen in the fact that almost all employed women work full-time - the highest percentage among employed women in the EU.[15]

Before the communist era, Bulgaria (like other Eastern European countries) was a largely rural agricultural society, with women being integrated in the rural agricultural work. As such, they occupied a relatively high status in society (although not equal to men). Under the communist regime, the country was industrialized and "modernized", and people came from rural areas to urban areas. The communist new ideology and economy integrated women in paid employment - in the late 1970s, Bulgaria had the highest percentage of working women in the world.[16] Women were integrated in almost all fields, including science and medicine, nevertheless they were strictly under the control of the state, were educated to be submissive to the state authorities (who were mostly male), and had very little power of self-expression. The fall of the communist had mixed results for women: while their economic security was affected (although this affected men too - as both men and women lost, in large numbers, their state-guaranteed jobs), women got the newly discovered freedom to open business, freely pursue artistic and cultural activities, and have freedom of speech.

While the newly emerging, 'wild', unrestricted capitalism of the 1990s was often hostile to women, many women have, in fact, succeeded: one-third of company owners and top managers in Bulgaria are women.[17] The high involvement of women in business is common to countries in the Eastern European region: "Overall, Eastern Europe continues to top the rankings in gender equality, with 35 percent of senior roles in the region held by women and just 16 percent of businesses with no women in senior management", according to a 2007 study.[18]

Education

The literacy rate is slightly lower for women compared to men: the literacy rate is 98.1% for females, while for males it is 98.7% (aged 15 or older, data from 2015).[19] Illiteracy is particularly high among Roma women, as well as, Roma men.[20]

Constitutional rights

The Constitution of Bulgaria provides for gender equality:[21] Art. 6.(1) All persons are born free and equal in dignity and rights. (2) All citizens shall be equal before the law. There shall be no privileges or restriction of rights on the grounds of race, national or social origin, ethnic self-identity, sex, religion, education, opinion, political affiliation, personal or social status or property status".

International obligations

Being part of the European Union (since 2007), Bulgaria is subject to its directives. Bulgaria is also a party to CEDAW. Bulgaria has ratified the Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings in 2007.[22]

Anti-discrimination laws

Discrimination is legally prohibited. The Protection Against Discrimination Act (2004) is Bulgaria's main anti-discrimination law. At Article 4 it states: "Any direct or indirect discrimination on grounds of gender, race, nationality, ethnicity, human genome, citizenship, origin, religion or belief, education, convictions, political affiliation, personal or social status, disability, age, sexual orientation, marital status, property status, or on any other grounds established by law or by an international treaty to which the Republic of Bulgaria is a party, shall be banned."[23]

Property inheritance

Women and men have equal legal rights. Both men and women own property such as land, buildings, and animals, and inheritance is partible (i.e., property is divided among all heirs rather than going to a single heir). In practice, some heirs may be disinherited or may receive more land than their siblings, and daughters traditionally inherited less land than sons. The latter was sometimes explained in terms of the often large dowries of household goods and sometimes land or livestock that women traditionally took into marriage. Houses were traditionally often inherited by youngest sons, who brought their wives to live in the family home.[7]

Reproductive rights and health

The maternal mortality rate in Bulgaria is 11 deaths/100,000 live births (as of 2010).[24] The total fertility rate (TFR) in Bulgaria is 1.45 children born/woman (2015 estimates), which is below the replacement rate, and one of the lowest in the world.[25] Abortion in Bulgaria is legal on request during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, and at later stages for medical reasons.

Marriage and family life

While marriage was traditionally very important in Bulgaria, there has been a rapid increase in unmarried cohabitation after the fall of communism. The transition from communism to market economy had a great impact on the demographic behavior of the population. After the fall of communism, the legal and social pressure to get married has declined, and the population has started to experience new life styles.[26] As of 2014, 58.8% of children were born to unmarried mothers.[27] In the European Values Study (EVS) of 2008, the percentage of Bulgarian respondents who agreed with the assertion that "Marriage is an outdated institution" was 27.2%.[28] A new Family Code came into effect in 2009, modernizing family law.[29] Legally, Bulgaria has long recognized the equality of men and women in family law. This is explicitly stipulated in the Family Code, Art 2, which defines seven principles of family relations, one of which is "equality between the man and the woman".[29] This is reinforced at Art 13, titled, "Equality between spouses" which states: "The spouses shall have equal rights and obligations in the matrimony."[29] Despite legal equality, societal norms of the Balkan culture often consider the wife to be in a position of subordination to the husband.[30]

In terms of maternity leave, from the beginning of the 1970s women in Bulgaria enjoyed two years of paid leave and one year of unpaid leave. In the early 1990s it was reduced to one year paid leave and one year unpaid leave.[31]

Violence against women

Bulgaria is part of the paradox of many Eastern European societies: a long tradition of involvement of women in public working life, and high professional status for women; but at the same time leniency towards domestic violence. A 1996 report stated: "Society recognizes women's intellectual abilities. For fifty years now, women constitute half of the labour force in the country. The situation in the family is different. The relationship model is a patriarchal one."[30]:14

In the 21st century, with the entry in the EU, Bulgaria has revised its policy on family violence, particularly by enacting its first domestic violence law, the 2005 Protection against Domestic Violence Act.[32] In 2015, Bulgaria repealed Article 158 of the Penal Code, which stated that a perpetrator of several sexual offences could escape prosecution by marrying the victim.[33][34]

Women's movement

In the 19th-century, small local women's groups started to form in Bulgaria. The women's movement was united and organized in the Bulgarian Women's Union in 1901, which campaigned for equal rights, among them women's suffrage, which was partially obtained in 1937. With the Communist take over in 1944, the women's movement was placed under government control through the state organization Bulgarian National Women's Union, and equal rights between men and women were introduced in law. An independent women's movement again resurfaced after 1989.

See also

References

  1. "Women in Parliaments: World Classification". archive.ipu.org.
  2. "File:Employment rates for selected population groups, 2004–14 (%) YB16.png - Statistics Explained". europa.eu. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  3. "Human Development Report 2021/2022" (PDF). HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORTS. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  4. "Global Gender Gap Report 2022" (PDF). World Economic Forum. Retrieved 15 February 2023.
  5. Nikolić-Ristanović, Vesna (2002). Social Change, Gender, and Violence: Post-Communist and War Affected Societies. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 18.
  6. Nikolić-Ristanović, Vesna (April 2004). "Post-communism: women's lives in transition". Feminist Review. 76 (1): 2–4. doi:10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400151.
  7. "Culture of Bulgaria - history, people, clothing, traditions, women, beliefs, food, customs, family". everyculture.com. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  8. Ruiz, Blanca Rodriguez; Rubio-Marín, Ruth (2012). The Struggle for Female Suffrage in Europe: Voting to Become Citizens. Leiden, The Netherlands: BRILL. pp. 329–330. ISBN 978-90-04-22425-4 via Google Books.
  9. "Women's Mobilization for War (South East Europe) - International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)". 1914-1918-online.net. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  10. "Women in Parliaments: World Classification". Inter-Parliamentary Union. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  11. Stoilova, Mariya (2010). "Post-Socialist Gender Transformations and Women's Experiences of Employment– Movements between Continuity and Change in Bulgaria". Journal of Organizational Change Management. 23 (6): 731–754. doi:10.1108/09534811011084384.
  12. "Gender equality". European Commission.
  13. "Employment rates for selected population groups" (PDF). European Commission. Retrieved 2016-06-17.
  14. "Labor force, female (% of total labor force) | Data". data.worldbank.org.
  15. "Part-time work: A divided Europe - Ocuparea Forţei de Muncă, Afaceri Sociale şi Incluziune - Comisia Europeană". European Commission.
  16. Bilefsky, Dan (February 7, 2010). "Women's Influence Grows in Bulgarian Public Life". The New York Times.
  17. Popov, Julian (15 December 2011). "Do women rule Bulgaria?". Al Jazeera.
  18. "Russia tops in female business leaders". March 8, 2016.
  19. "The World Factbook". CIA. Archived from the original on 24 November 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  20. "UNICEF Europe and Central Asia". UNICEF.
  21. "National Assembly of the Republic of Bulgaria - Constitution". National Assembly of Bulgaria.
  22. "Full list". Council of Europe.
  23. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. "Refworld | Bulgaria: Protection Against Discrimination Act". Refworld.
  24. "The World Factbook". CIA. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  25. "The World Factbook — Central Intelligence Agency". CIA. Archived from the original on 2009-10-28. Retrieved 2015-07-08.
  26. Koytcheva, Elena (18–23 July 2005). Contemporary union formation in Bulgaria: the emergence of cohabitation. XXV International Population Conference of the International Union for the Scientific Study of the Population. Retrieved 17 June 2016 via researchgate.net.
  27. "Population and Demographic Processes in 2014: (Final Data)" (PDF). Nsi.bg. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  28. "Gesis: Zacat". Zacat.gesis.org. Retrieved 2016-06-17.
  29. "Family Code : Chapter One : General Provisions" (PDF). Kenarova.com. 2009. Retrieved 17 June 2016.
  30. Minnesota Advocates for Human Rights (April 1996). Domestic Violence in Bulgaria (PDF) (Report). ISBN 0-929293-33-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 July 2017 via The Advocates for Human Rights.
  31. "Parichni obezshteteniya" Парични обезщетения [Monetary benefits]. nssi.bg (in Bulgarian).
  32. "Protection against Domestic Violence Act". Archived from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  33. "Nakazatelen kodeks" Наказателен кодекс [Penal Code] (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 20 April 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  34. Note: Article 158 stated "In the cases of Articles 149 - 151 and 153, the perpetrator shall not be punished, or the imposed punishment shall not be served, if prior to the enforcement of the sentence there follows a marriage between the man and the woman."
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