
Gender Equality Problems in Soviet Reality
Author(s) -
Ketevan Jojishvili
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of social, political and economic research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2667-8810
DOI - 10.46291/ijospervol8iss2pp303-309
Subject(s) - communism , paternalism , soviet union , state (computer science) , constitution , legislation , political science , politics , pathos , work (physics) , law , political economy , sociology , art , literature , algorithm , computer science , mechanical engineering , engineering
The Soviet Union was a totalitarian and strictly centralized state, which from the day of its foundation was intended to create a new human. The idea of formal equality written in its constitution and legislation was not a guarantee of real equality in the Soviet Union. The Communist Party deeply believed in the rise of its own tolerant policies, although the existing facts became a barometer of its failure. Despite the established way of life (education, work, etc.), women were neither represented in the ruling circle nor fully participated in the development and implementation of state policy. Thus, the Soviet Union with its paternalistic politics sought both to weaken the influence of men on women by improving the condition of women and to saturate deeply women's lives with Soviet pathos and communist beliefs.