Why women are authoritarianisms targetsand how they can be its undoing

Published: Nov. 3, 2022, 6:08 a.m.

Harvard Kennedy School Professor Erica Chenoweth and Lecturer in Public Policy Zoe Marks say the parallel global trends of rising authoritarianism and attempts to roll back women\u2019s rights are no coincidence. The hard won rights women have attained over the past century\u2014to education, to full participation in the workforce, in politics, and civic life, and to reproductive healthcare\u2014have transformed society and corresponded with historic waves of democratization around the world. But they have also increasingly become the target of authoritarian leaders and regimes looking to displace democracy with hierarchies controlled by male elites and to re-confine women in traditional roles as wives, mothers, and caregivers. LGBTQ people and others who don\u2019t fit into the traditional binary patriarchal model have become targets not just in places like Iran, Russia, Brazil, and Saudi Arabia but also China, Hungary, Poland, and the United States. But Chenoweth and Marks say the authoritarians are also fearful of empowered women\u2014and that their research says they should be. Social movements like the protests currently underway in Iran that include large numbers of women tend to be more resilient, creative, and ultimately successful\u2014which means the future of democracy and the future of women\u2019s empowerment in this pivotal historic era may go hand-in-hand.