
— April – May 2013
W
HEN the Irish Women Workers Union was founded in
September , one of its leading figures, Constance
Markievicz, addressed the first meeting. She said that the
union would not only give women a greater voice in the work-
place but would also help to win them the vote and improve their status in
society. Two years later in , Jacobs biscuit factory in Dublin forced
three young women to remove their union badges. This action was piv-
otal in the lockout.
The Irish Women Workers Union
fought many of its battles along tra-
ditional lines, to win improved pay
and conditions. It played a key role
as a voice for women’s rights and par-
ity with men in the workplace until
it amalgamated with the Federated
Workers Union in . By bringing
women together and being a voice
for women workers, the Irish Women
Workers Union paved the way for the
establishment of women’s organisa-
tions and their fight for equality and
women’s rights in Ireland.
The Irish Women’s Liberation
Movement was established in .
The movement’s manifesto ‘Chains
or Change’ contained five demands
- equal pay, equality before the law,
equal education, contraception and
justice for deserted wives, unmarried
mothers and widows.
Being a collective voice for women
and women’s organisations was also at
the heart of the Council of the Status
of Women (which later became the
National Women’s Council of Ireland)
when it was established in by a
group of feminists chaired by Hilda
Tweedy of the Irish Housewives
Association. This year the National Women’s Council of Ireland celebrates
its th anniversary. The struggles of these organisations have gener-
ated significant gains for women’s equality in particular in the area of
employment and economic independence.
Our entry into the European Union, the introduction of employment-
equality and equal-status legislation, improved health services and
increased access to, and better outcomes from, education, have all played
their part in moving women forward. However, women still remain on the
margins of Irish society at many levels. Women are virtually invisible in
debates about the nature of our current crisis, about options for recov-
ery and about how social and economic issues are defined and prioritised
in this country. Women’s experience of the recession has been virtually
ignored in public debate, despite the fact that their unemployment levels
increased by over % in the last year compared to over % for men.
Women entered the recession on an unequal footing to men. While the
period of economic growth was characterised by a rapid increase in wom-
en’s employment, women in Ireland continued to be the primary carers in
families and bear the major burden of domestic and household work.
The myth that women’s equality has been achieved pervades the
media public discourse and public policy. A key challenge for those of
us concerned with promoting women’s rights is to ensure that women’s
experience is named and reflected as a primary concern in this discourse.
This would recognise that addressing women’s inequality, poverty, and
the discrimination they face will benefit all of society, including women,
men, families and communities.
Women of course are not a homogeneous group and any strategies
aimed at women must address the multiple layers of discrimination and
oppression faced by thousands of women from particularly marginalised
communities. These include Traveller women, women with disability, les-
bian women and migrant/asylum seeking women.
There are promising signs. There has been a resurgence in interest
in feminism and what it can offer to Ireland’s recovery. Across universi-
ties there has been a growth of feminist societies. The membership of the
NWCI is growing nationally. There has been widespread interest in the Y
Factor, the NWCI’s youth initiative to encourage and facilitate a voice for
young women and men championing women’s equality.
The current economic crisis has led to a questioning of our values and
recognition of the need to develop and debate a new set of values for a dif-
ferent society. Equality and gender equality must be central to these new
values. Women are at the centre of community-based activity: as political
activists, voluntary and paid workers, management members, spokespeo-
ple and representatives.
Some of the inequalities which women experience, particularly in the
area of political representation, have been recognised and acknowledged
Women entered
the recession on
an unequal footing
to men. While
the period of
economic growth
was characterised
by a rapid increase
in women’s
employment,
women in Ireland
continued to be the
primary carers in
families and bear
the major burden
of domestic and
household work
Women have continued to organise and campaign for
their rights and social change since 1913, when the Irish
Women Workers Union focused its energies on giving
voice to women workers. The theme of the “Y Factor”,
the youth intiative of the National Women’s Council,
at its launch this year, was ‘Our Voice matters’. While
many of the issues have changed, the need and demand for women’s rights
remains. Translating this voice into real change for women and substantive
equality remains the challenge for the NWCI and the women’s movement
today, writes Orla O’Connor, Director of the National Women’s Council
of Ireland