Indian women in dire straits, report states: Featured in bottom of statistics across the board
Thursday, December 9, 2004 at 10:01PM
TheSpook
A new report shows that Native American women have lower social and
economic status than white women throughout the U.S., with lower
earnings, less education, more poverty, and worse health status. The
Status of Women in the States, written by the Institute for Women's
Policy Research, reports that the median annual earnings of Native
American women who work full-time, full-year in the U.S. are $25,500,
and they make only 58 cents for every dollar white men in the country
make. The report says 25% - one in four - of American Indian women in
the U.S. live in poverty. The number is even greater for Native
American single mothers: more than a third (38%) of families headed by
a Native American single mother live in poverty. NCAI Executive
Director Jacqueline Johnson said the report reflects a troubling degree
of inequality for Native American and Alaska Native women in the areas
of political participation, employment and earnings, social and
economic autonomy, and health and well being. "Effective federal, state
and local policies to lower American Indian women's poverty rates are
greatly needed to address these disparities," Johnson said. "Ways to
address these inequities include emphasis on educational attainment,
enforcement of equal opportunity laws, payment of living wages,
increased access to affordable child care, and providing adequate
health and leave benefits." The differences between Native women
who live in urban and rural areas are even more pronounced. In
non-metro areas, those working full-time, full-year make only $23,200,
and women in metro areas make $27,600. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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