Sunday, March 16, 2025

Questioning the Existence of Women: The Impact of Ideological, Cultural, and Socio-Economic Structural Hegemony

 Hajidah Sahwa Sadiqah and Zaidan Zainaddin

Hegemoni Struktural terhadap Eksistensi Perempuan
Structural Hegemony towards Women's Existence

Feminist Society Indonesia — One of the most striking elements in the dark pages of Indonesian history in 1965 was the hegemonic ideological control in the New Order regime that made femininity have to be in line with the conservative nature of women, returning to the obedient and compliant Sumbadra. As a result of myths, images, and inappropriate strategic efforts in ideological control, women are kept from achieving freedom, making women individuals by questioning their situations and conditions as women themselves.

According to Beauvoir, the existence of women is based on awareness (with others). Women are not born but "made". The Indonesian system and culture still reinforce the nature of women by perpetuating the myth that women must adopt a submissive, passive, obedient character towards male family members, be shy and polite in sexual matters, be nurturing and sacrifice themselves, always be an object, and be closely associated with being a wife and mother.

The state, as the protector of all its people, is still gender biased in various aspects of life, which creates a space (oppression) of gender discrimination, violence, and sexual harassment. Structural violence does not involve clear individual perpetrators but occurs because of unjust social systems and structures. It causes loss or suffering for individuals or groups through rules, policies, and practices that hinder their access to all needs.

In the Annual Notes (CATAHU) of the National Commission on Violence Against Women (Komnas Perempuan) 2024, the number of complaints of cases of Violence against Women in 2023 was 289,111, of which 4,347 were complaints to the National Commission on Violence Against Women, while 3,303 were cases of gender-based violence. This number means that, on average, Komnas Perempuan receives 16 complaints daily.

The complaint data for these cases are gender-based violence (GBV), which is still dominated by violence against women:

Personal/Domestic Realm

284.741 cases (98.5%)

Public Domain

4.182 cases (1.4%)

State Domain

188 cases  (0.1%)

This underlines that the domestic space, which should be a safe place, is the central location for violence. On the other hand, violence in the public and state spheres continues to reflect a systemic failure to protect women in various spaces.

The combination of these problems has a relationship and continuity with other problems. Structures or policies that still perpetuate violence indirectly against women, namely, causing women in Indonesia to experience gender oppression. Oppression is the cruel or unjust treatment of people or groups with power over the other group. The unjust treatment of power is often under governmental, cultural opprobrium, and authority.

Structural and personal violence experienced by women in Indonesia has finally become a culture so that society normalizes all forms of oppression against women. Women are considered to be naturally subject to violence, sexual harassment, discrimination, marginalization, exploitation, powerlessness, and subaltern.

This habit is affirmed by cultural imperialism over a very long period, making society normalize the culture of subordinating women's rights, even women, against themselves. Normalizing gender inequality will lead to increasingly intense forms of discrimination so that it can strengthen the doctrine or myth that women are attached to number two, obedient, passive, and objects.

How could it not be? Silenced voices and lost hopes give women no fighting power, even for themselves. They have been silent since the beginning, thinking about their fate; efforts to equalize gender cannot be executed because they have not been able to free themselves individually. Women's dependence on a dominant structure or group makes privilege strengthen the loss of women's existence. A dominant structure will become an inherent culture.

All sectors support women's powerlessness (structurally, culturally, individually, even women themselves) so that, in the end, women individually and in groups do not realize that they are in a threatened position. According to Young's theory, the struggle is seeking justice with the right to fair conditions for self-development and freedom of self-determination for each individual, as well as working together between women and uniting for this.

According to Young’s theory, the principle of justice is simple: treating everyone based on the same rules, norms, standards, and principles of rights or law. Every individual has rights and limitations according to norms, rules, and laws, in which policymakers have the power with the hope of not abusing power.

The domino effect of the problems that haunt women as a whole causes gender economic inequality (women's financial freedom). This condition is very burdensome for women economically because they consider women deserve lower wages than men.

You can also read: Breaking Barriers: Women’s Economic Empowerment in Rural Areas

In the economic sector, the State makes a policy on the Special Budget for Gender Targets aimed at women's and men's basic needs. In terms of spending, the Malang City Government, through the Social Service, Women's Empowerment, Child Protection, Population Control, and Family Planning (DINSOS P3AP2KB), plans gender-related programs. The Special Budget for Gender Targets is spent on Policy Advocacy and Assistance for Women's Protection Services.

The Malang City Government budgets activities in this category in the form of socialization of prevention of sexual violence. The Budget for Institutionalization of Gender Equality (Affirmative Action) is in the form of allocations for forms of institutionalization of Gender Mainstreaming initiated by the Regional Government. This expenditure can be budgeted in the data collection process and other related activities such as increasing the capacity of Human Resources.

If we look at the 2023 Malang City Regional Budget (APBD), the most significant expenditure is in the social assistance expenditure post for individuals and community groups at 30% of the total spending, followed by regional administration support expenditure with a percentage of 28% and in third place is social rehabilitation expenditure for skills training with an amount of 19% of the total spending of the DINSOS P3AP2KB. The portion of expenditure related to gender affairs and women's empowerment is only 7.53%. There is a reasonably significant expenditure difference compared to regional administration support expenditure.

Marginalization keeps weaker groups outside the boundaries, combined with fragmentation, to keep the distance between non-superior groups. Furthermore, this applies in the context of gender, where women are the inferior group and are shaped by the structure.

In this case, policies that perpetuate economic inequality against women usually arise from a combination of historical, cultural, political, and institutional factors that do not take women's needs, roles, or rights into account equally (structural violence).

Lack of equal legal protection, namely, Indonesia without strong policies to protect women from sexual harassment or discrimination and subordination, women tend to face more significant economic barriers. The government does not consider women's economic empowerment a strategic priority, even though many studies show that improving women's position in the economy drives incredible economic growth in the country and can meet their basic needs.

Gender policies are often not evaluated to ensure their impact on women and men, so gender equality in the economy is not known or improved. Policies should focus on the underlying issues of direct violence in society, one of which is the economy. Therefore, both awareness of a woman to show her existence and empower herself and the government also significantly impact the success of gender equality.

The role of dominance that has long been adopted by men and women who are reluctant to empower themselves in all areas has an epic combination when combined with the absence of women's empowerment by structural policies. Women are identical to economic dependence on men; how could it not be? Women earn less and are burdened with domestic roles, so it makes sense when mothers prefer to stay at home because the dominant structural group is indifferent. The culture is inherent so that society normalizes women at home, and the cycle of women's dependency continues so that discrimination is difficult to eliminate. If women choose to become working mothers, then the double burden is adopted by women with domestic burdens that seem to be mandatory for women to bear.

All of these issues are inseparable from the circle of structural violence created for women; in the end, there is a gap created between men's and women's rights; the view of women is below men, and women become number two, causing difficulties for women in obtaining their rights such as health services, economic resources, work and education caused by political and economic policies which are a form of structural violence.

If you are interested in issues related to gender equality and in-depth discussions about feminism, join with Feminist Society Indonesia. Feminist Society Indonesia aims to promote gender equality and women’s rights activism through education and advocacy. To get related articles, please visit the page feminist-society.blogspot.com.

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View More:

R. P. Tong. 1998. Feminist Thought. (Yogyakarta: Jalasutra).

P. Barker. 2018. The Silence of The Girls. (London: Penguin Random House).

J. Galtung. 2011. A Missing Family of Classical Orthogonal Polynomials. Journal of Physics Mathematical and Theoretical. Volume 44. Number 8. https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/44/8/085201

C. Yoon. 2014. Feminist Marxism. Paper Knowledge. Toward a Media History of Documents, 1990.

D. A. Germia. 2020. Critical Logic of Classical Philosophers.

 

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