International Women’s Day: Balance the Scales

Yesterday was International Women’s Day (IWD). Around the world, people will mark this day with events that highlight women’s achievements and focus on the long road left for gender equality. This year’s themes, chosen by two of the main voices in the movement, say a lot about how the world talks about women’s rights today. The UN has set its banner around balancing the scales, while the IWD organisation has also chosen “Balance the Scales” as its call to action for 2026. It’s rare to see both align so closely, but it raises real questions. What exactly does “balance” mean? Is the metaphor useful? Or does it make things too simple in a world where the weight isn’t just on one side of the scale?

What Does “Balance the Scales” Actually Mean?
“Balance the Scales” sounds like a cliché at first. But both the UN and the IWD organisation are using it this year, so let’s unpack it. The clearest way to understand the phrase is as a demand for fair treatment. In blunt terms, too many rules, official or unspoken, still stop women and girls from being safe, heard, or free to make choices. Think of discriminatory laws. Think of violence. Think of missed jobs, unequal pay, or leadership doors shut in their faces.

The image of scales is meant to show justice. Balance implies fairness. But here’s the rub: real life rarely acts like a perfect set of scales. The problems aren’t all the same everywhere. For example, women in Afghanistan face different struggles than those in Norway. Not every barrier is visible, and not every answer is a change in law. The theme’s simplicity risks making the battles all seem equal when they aren’t.

Celebrating Progress, But Not Mistaking it for the End
IWD is, at heart, a day for both celebration and protest. There has been genuine movement. Women vote, lead, and shape their countries in ways their grandmothers couldn’t dream of in much of the world. But pointing out the progress often masks the scale of what’s left. The pay gap still hasn’t closed. Gender-based violence remains a fact of life for millions. Parliamentary seats and CEO chairs are mainly filled by men even in nations with free elections and stable economies.

Even the way we talk about “progress” can hide the truth. Some changes are surface-level. A woman named CEO isn’t a sign of equal opportunity if her company’s board is still stacked against her or if her appointment is used to hide the deeper bias that never vanished. When “balance” is claimed too soon, it keeps us from seeing that old habits and prejudices are only evolving, not disappearing.

Are the Scales the Right Metaphor?
Let’s be honest: the scales are easy to picture, but they flatten the complexity. What does a “balanced” world look like? Equal pay? Equal numbers in parliament? Or something deeper, where difference doesn’t mean disadvantage? Some would argue that perfect parity is neither possible nor desirable if it ignores choice and culture.

And then there’s backlash. The word “balance” draws protest from people who believe women are already favoured, or who see these campaigns as blaming all men. The metaphor of scales, if pushed too far, risks framing equality as a zero-sum contest. But gender justice isn’t a math problem where more for one side means less for the other. The metaphor would work better if it made room for nuances: race, class, sexuality, and culture. Power sits at intersections. Some women have more privilege than many men ever will. The risk is that we talk of “all women” as if they’re the same, when the real world is far more tangled.

Shifting the Narrative: Who Owns Women’s Day?
Both UN Women and the IWD organisation are pushing collective action this year. The language is everywhere: “shared ownership,” “movement powered by all.” It’s a way of trying to prevent top-down dictates, making IWD something that grows from millions of people acting in their own streets and workplaces. The idea is that the struggle belongs to no one person or group, but to everyone. In practice, of course, not all voices carry the same weight. Celebrities, corporate partners, and big NGOs often shape IWD in public, while local actions and unglamorous fights for justice are often drowned out.

That means a real challenge for “shared ownership.” When businesses use the day for branding, it dilutes the meaning. The risk is that companies pay lip service to gender equality while avoiding hard questions, like how they treat staff or whose stories get told. It’s not hard to imagine a world where IWD becomes another hashtag event, with slick meetings, speeches, and awards, while women on the margins see nothing change.

Beyond Slogans: What Needs Fixing?
So, what’s really stopping progress? It’s not just about the law. Sure, in some countries, girls still can’t go to school, and that’s a direct result of policy. But even where rights are protected, invisible barriers persist. Who does the housework? Who stops working when a child is born? Who gets believed when they report abuse?

Balance, if it’s more than a slogan, would mean real shifts in all these areas. Not just fairness in numbers, but also in attitudes. Research shows that just changing laws isn’t enough; cultures need to shift, too. That happens slowly and by constant pushback.

Why Do Some People Oppose International Women’s Day?
Any talk of IWD sparks anger in some circles. Some see it as divisive or outdated. Some claims celebrating women push aside men’s problems. But this kind of pushback often misses the point. Acknowledging women’s problems doesn’t mean ignoring others. In fact, a better balance for women often spills over to help society in general. For example, when women earn more or have safer workplaces, families as a whole benefit. Health outcomes improve, children thrive, and economies grow stronger.

But it’s important to address criticisms honestly. Not every IWD event is meaningful, and some do slip into empty virtue signalling. If a company signs on for IWD but pays its female workers less or sponsors events while ignoring harassment in its own ranks, the critique is fair. The day is not inherently radical or transformative. It only works when actions back up the slogans.

Is the Day Still Needed?
Some people claim that women have “made it” and that a special day is no longer necessary. The numbers tell another story. Globally, women still earn less than men and own fewer assets. They’re more likely to be in insecure work and more likely to do unpaid labour. In many parts of the world, violence against women remains common, and impunity often protects abusers.

If anything, the day matters more now than ever. It’s not just a time to repeat old victories but to reckon with unfinished business, sharpen the debate, and keep pressure on systems that claim equality while delivering little change.

What About Tradition and Culture?
Some critics argue that pushing for more equality upsets traditional cultures. But culture is not static. In many societies, the same people who defend “tradition” also benefit most from old power structures. That doesn’t mean all tradition is bad, but it does mean it’s worth asking whose interests are being served when someone says a change is “too much, too fast.”

Not every tradition by default deserves protection. And culture can adapt. In fact, history shows us that social norms change when enough people push for it. The very fact that IWD is mainstream now, rather than a fringe protest, shows how ideas can evolve.

Why “Balance” Isn’t the End Goal
Even if the scales were truly level, the work wouldn’t be done. Human relationships aren’t about perfect symmetry. The focus shouldn’t be on mathematical equality—one for one, fifty-fifty—but on dignity, respect, and the freedom for everyone, regardless of gender, to live fully and safely. “Balance” as a theme makes sense if it means breaking the old forms of bias and letting new, fairer arrangements emerge.

But if “balance” means small improvements while big patterns of inequality remain, it risks stopping progress dead. Slogans should guide, not chain, the movement.

What Would a Real “Balance” Look Like?
If we take the metaphor seriously, real balance is structural change. That means more than just more women in boardrooms. It means closing the pay gap, ending violence, making reproductive rights real, supporting care work, and making space for every kind of woman, not just those who match the dominant ideal.

It also means dismantling the systems that keep men from being full caregivers or that force gender stereotypes on everyone. True balance reshapes assumptions all the way down. It won’t happen overnight. And it won’t come from slogans alone.

What’s Next?
International Women’s Day will come and go, as it does every year. There’ll be speeches and banners and maybe even a few legal changes. But if the day is to be more than a yearly ritual, it needs more than words. Balance the Scales should be a starting point for a much tougher conversation, one where old ideas can be questioned, and the messy, lived experience of all women can guide the work.

So, when marking the day this year, or any year, don’t just settle for slogans. Ask hard questions. Demand real accountability. And respect that the “balance” many talk about still needs to be fought for, piece by piece, in changing rooms, offices, streets, and parliaments everywhere.

Women’s Empowerment

It’s been about two months since International Women’s Day was celebrated and commemorated across the world. Everywhere, be it on social media or in the physical world, we saw people celebrating the day with events and posts aimed at empowering women. But what happened after that? I feel we have gone back to business as usual. Things are becoming better, 2022 was better than 2021 which was slightly better than 2020, but the issues surrounding women’s empowerment still need a lot to be desired.

Women empowerment means gender equality, since there is a serious inequality  between women and men in every sphere of our life. Women Empowerment is not a segmental need, but a solution to the great problems that afflict the world. The empowerment of women has a far-reaching impact on their own lives, their families and communities, and society as a whole. Women who are empowered to make choices in all areas of their lives, have greater control over their health, their careers and their quality of life.

Women’s or female empowerment may be defined in several ways, including accepting women’s viewpoints or making an effort to seek them, raising the status of women through education, awareness, literacy, and training. Women’s empowerment equips and allows women to make life-determining decisions through the different problems in society so they may have the opportunity to redefine gender roles or other such roles, which in turn may allow them more freedom to pursue desired goals. It allows women to control and benefit from resources, assets, and income as well as aids their ability to manage risk and improve well-being resulting in approaches to support trivialised genders in a particular political or social context. While often interchangeably used, the more comprehensive concept of gender empowerment concerns people of any gender, stressing the distinction between biological and gender as a role. Women empowerment helps in boosting the status of women through literacy, education, training and awareness creation and refers to women’s ability to make strategic life choices that had been previously denied them. Nations, businesses, communities and groups may benefit from the implementation of programs and policies that adopt the notion of female empowerment and this, in turn, enhances the quality and the number of human resources available for development. Empowerment is one of the main procedural concerns when addressing human rights and development.

In a world where almost 50% of the world’s population comprises women, empowering this section of society is not just important, but essential. Even today, there are many societies where women are still discriminated against because of their gender. Even in many first world countries, women are still paid less and are expected to take on the lion’s share of the housework and rear children. etc. In many cultures, women are not allowed outside after sunset, work outside the house and if allowed to work, not allowed to work far away from their homes, not allowed to choose their life partners and in many villages in India, are dictated on what they can and can’t wear and even on whether they can use a phone or not!

Empowering women is to give women the right. Women can and should have an equal right to participate in education, society, economy and politics. An empowered woman is a strong one who can do anything they want to do. Empowerment helps to reduce in domestic violence, sexual abuse, emotion abuse and physical abuse.

When societies progress, societal culture should not be seen as a barrier and an obstacle to women’s rights. Culture is an integral and huge part of diversity and a medium that seeks to ensure women’s equal opportunities. It recognises their freedom to take pride in their values, whether they are orthodox or modern in nature. There is a need for equal cultural rights for women to be acknowledged and implemented which would in turn help to reconstruct gender in ways that would rise above women’s inferiority and subordination. Experts say that women must be recognised as, and supported to be, equal spokespersons vested with the authority to determine which of the community’s traditions are to be respected, protected and transmitted to future generations. Many of the barriers to women’s empowerment and equity are the result of cultural norms. While many women are aware issues posed by gender inequality, others have become accustomed to it. Many men in power are hesitant to disrupt societal norms that are unfair to women.

Research shows that the increasing access to the Internet can also result in an increased exploitation of women because releasing personal information on websites has put some women’s personal safety at risk. In 2010, Working to Halt Online Abuse stated that 73% of women were victimized through such sites. According to the International Labour Organisation or ILO, sexual harassment is a clear form of gender discrimination based on sex, a manifestation of unequal power relations between men and women. Studies show that women face more barriers in the workplace than men with gender-related barriers involving sexual harassment, unfair hiring practices, career progression, and unequal pay where women are paid less than men are for performing the same job. When taking the median earnings of men and women who worked full-time, year-round, government data from 2014 showed that women made $0.79 for every dollar a man earned and the average earnings for working mothers came out to even less — $0.71 for every dollar a father made, according to 2014 study conducted by the National Partnership for Women and Children. While much of the public discussion of the wage gap has focused around women getting equal pay for the same work as their male peers, many women struggle with what is called the “pregnancy penalty”. This occurrence is difficult to measure, but the possibility of having a baby can be enough for employers to disrupt women’s pay. Women are put in a position where they need to make the decision of whether to maintain in the workforce or have children.

Education empowers women to make choices that improve their children’s health, their well-being, and chances of acquiring survival skills. Education informs others of preventing and containing a disease and empowers women to make choices that can improve their welfare, including marrying beyond childhood and having fewer children. Education can increase women’s awareness of their rights, boost their self-esteem, and provide them the opportunity to assert their rights. Education is not universally available and gender inequalities persist. A major concern in many countries is not only the limited numbers of girls going to school, but also the number of educational pathways for those that step into the classroom. In some parts of the world, girls and women are attacked for attending school, and societal efforts to stop this may be lacking. COVID has made these inequalities starker with many girls and women pulled out of schools and institutions of higher learnings.

The Internet is also conversely often a source of empowerment for women through its creation, dispersion, and utilisation of hashtags on social media. Growing Internet access in the late 20th century provided women with various tools to empower themselves. Women began to use social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter for online activism and through this, they are able to empower themselves by organising campaigns and voicing their opinions for equality rights. Blogging emerged as one tool for educational female empowerment. According to a study done by the University of California, Los Angeles, medical patients who read and write about their disease are often in a much happier mood and more knowledgeable than those who do not. By reading others’ experiences, patients can better educate themselves and apply strategies that their fellow bloggers suggest. With the easy accessibility and affordability of e-learning, women can study from the comfort of their homes and learn skills that help them advance in their careers.

Women are the secret to a nation’s bright future and so any country which empowers its girls and women is one which has invested in its future. So if you are a woman reading this, make sure you let your daughters be able to soar and reach their full potential. And if you have sons, teach them to respect women and be an admirable ally to the women in their lives. And if you are a man reading this, be the ally that the women around you are proud to have.