Marxian Feminism and the South Korean Beauty Paradigm: Globalization, Capitalist Sexual Exploitation, and the Western Male Gaze

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By: Sydney Volkerts

While it is important for any educated consumer of information to note that any statistics may be arguably biased to some degree, a sweep of the available data overwhelmingly suggests that approximately one in five South Korean women has undergone at least one form of cosmetic surgery – but the numbers don’t stop there. An increasing number of South Korean men are also going under the knife, and many, if not most, South Korean women undergo much more than simply one single procedure: as VICE news captured in their interview with a Korean woman, “In Korea, we call doing your eyes and nose the basics. They’re the standard procedures.”

This twenty percent of South Korean plastic surgery patients is, statistically, at least, remarkably high, especially in consideration of the United States average (oftentimes listed as being the second or third world leader in cosmetic surgery) of one in twenty citizens seeking surgical perfection. The beauty myth and pressures for women to seek its ideal is certainly nothing new – although undeniably stronger than ever with the aid of increasing mass media, online social networking, and photoshop – and yet, South Korea is by far the world’s leader in plastic surgery per capita, indicating that, at least for now, this new phenomenon bears a unique geographic distinctness.

Reactions to this new beauty paradigm for South Korean women range from enthusiastic support to contemptuous disgust – but all too often, attention, especially as it relates to the later, centers solely on the role of the female actors, without consideration for any underlying reasons compelling their behavior. However, taking too narrow of a view is problematic, because – as with any social issue – behaviors are multidimensional, and as such, the trend in South Korea simply cannot be dismissed as an issue of low national self-esteem or vanity. The difficulty in understanding why these women get such radical surgery, lies in the fact that we are socialized – that is, we are raised and repeatedly taught how to see and feel the world around us beginning at such an early age that we hardly, if ever, notice its strong, lasting grips on our thoughts and personality – to downplay or ignore the underlying reasons behind it: patriarchy, global capitalism, oppression, and exploitation.

This post is by no means a comprehensive account of these issues, nor am I attempting to give the impression that these four issues alone are the only factors contributing to the escalating South Korean plastic surgery rate. Rather, it is written with the aim of spreading awareness about an increasingly growing international trend that merits much more examination than is currently given to it, and briefly summarizing what I believe to be points that are crucial in both promoting cultural understanding, as well as contributing to a larger discussion of the positions women continue to face in today’s society – without demonizing the women themselves.

MARX

Marx had a lot to say about a variety of topics, and at times can be a pretty dense read; but his basic – and perhaps most famous – point is quite simple: when society advanced from feudalism (agricultural families working on their farms) to capitalism (industrial families living and working in the city), a groundbreaking, radical shift in humanity happened. We witnessed the rise of two predominant social classes – the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. The bourgeoisie were the individuals in power; they possessed direct access to the means of production (things ensuring human survival and comfort such as food and hobbies) – that is, they had the money, property, power, and influence to oversee and control the emerging industrial economy: these were the politicians, the businessmen, the factory owner, and so forth. On the other hand, the proletariats were the common people: these were the factory workers, the average joe, and the assembly line grunts, who possessed indirect access to the means of production – meaning they were completely dependent upon the bourgeoisie (capitalist) to survive – the proletariat must sell their labor power in order to survive. Capitalism brought with it an increasing focus on and demand for speed, productivity, and efficiency, all mechanized through our growing technological advancements. Hence, what was once a struggle and burden for families to sustain their farmland and grow suitable crops (feudalism) now became a struggle and burden to produce as many products as possible in as little time as possible (capitalism). The emergence of capitalism not only birthed these demands for a better, faster, newer product, but also brought the re-evaluation of capital (money): in other words, the bourgeoisie were concerned not just with a better, faster, newer product, but how much (i.e., the least amount of) money this process would necessitate.

Enter Marx’s most poignant criticism of this new radical shift in humanity: through capitalism, the bourgeoisie were able to keep their power, money, and influence for themselves at the total expense of the proletariat by exploiting their labor power. The deadly combination of increasing demands and reduced wages for meeting them resulted in a disparaging condition for the proletariat: alienation. Work became not just a struggle and a burden, but a competition as well. Failure to perform at the level required of you resulted in your replacement – and the crisis in terms of keeping yourself and your family afloat. Not only did coworkers and peers become potential rivals, but you became alienated from yourself as well: long hours of repetitive dribble in return for a salary so meager it just barely ensured your family’s basic survival created the dreary somnambulist (i.e., blank eyed-sleepwalker going through the motions of life without any tangible reward) worker we often poke fun of today (how enthusiastic are your average workers at Taco Bell, for example). The exploitation of the proletariat purely so that the bourgeoisie could reap all the rewards (money, power, influence) and the resulting alienation meant that, according to Marx, capitalism was only beneficial for some (the bourgeoisie), while the majority of others (the proletariat) suffered a less-than-meaningful or prosperous life.

MARX WITH A FEMINIST LENS

Patriarchy, in its most general form, describes a system of unequal power relations within a society or government, in which men largely possess power and women are largely excluded from possessing power. Whereas Marx viewed unequal power relations in a capitalist society through a social class lens (i.e., bourgeoisie and proletariat), Marxian theory can easily be (and often is) applied with a gender lens, in which those with stereotypic masculine gender identities (biologically born males) possess a largely unequal majority of power, while those with stereotypic feminine gender identities (biologically born females, homosexual women and men, transgender individuals, or gender non-conforming biologically born men à basically, anyone who is not a cisgender male who also exhibits stereotypic masculine gender qualities) possess next to no power.

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The diagram above illustrates a provocative point made by feminist scholar (and personal hero of mine) Catherine Mackinnon: “Sexuality is the feminism what work is to Marxism: that which is most one’s own, yet most taken away.”

MacKinnon argues that we can compare the struggle of the proletariat to the struggle faced by women in society. However, she argues that the liberation of women is not to be mistaken as a replacement of the class struggle of the proletariat, but, importantly, that it is a distinct struggle that exists alongside class struggles and as such, requires a separate effort if women are to be liberated.

Just as the proletariat is treated as nothing more than their labor power (what skills they can offer to the bourgeoisie in exchange for survival), women are treated as nothing more than their sexuality – that is, sexual bargaining power is all women are left with once one considers who composes the bourgeoisie: (gender conformant, biologically-born) men.

Women, statistically, do not comprise the bourgeoisie. By and far, an overwhelming majority of CEO’s, corporate partners, politicians, and world leaders are (gender conformant, biologically-born) men. Granted, at the time MacKinnon was writing, women occupied even fewer spaces in the labor market than they do today, but nonetheless, the fact remains that those with direct access to the means of production are (gender conformant, biologically-born) men. What’s a woman to do? What does she offer that her competitors in the struggle for means of production (survival) cannot? The obvious answer is her sexuality. Anyone skeptical of this fact must ask themselves: name the ways in which women make the most amount of money in the quickest way possible. Even today, no women underestimates the power of a smartly-aimed coy smile, a giggle, or a certain type of clothing. And why is this? According to MacKinnon, women are subordinated by virtue of their biological sex: as such, they are dependent upon men if they are to access the means of production and survive. Adding to this is the fact that, in terms of unequal gender power relations, men also possess a crucial element which women have come to equate with their prosperous survival: love. What woman, at some level, hasn’t been instructed from a young age to look forward to her wedding day? Indeed, women are taught that a lifetime of self-sacrifice for the needs of others can, at best (if she works hard enough!), result in happiness by means of acceptance of who she is through the legal formality of marriage.

Women’s labor power is undeniably worth less than that of men (look at wage gaps, for one). Therefore, the unequal power structure created by men for men necessitates that, if they are to survive, women must sell their sexual labor to men. Alienation, in this sense, is even more profound, as women are not just selling their abilities to the powerful, but they are selling a part of their own body. By saying that “femininity is women’s identity to women as well as women’s desirability to men”, MacKinnon is illustrating the deeply internalized subordination that women experience on a day-to-day basis: women often aren’t even aware that this subordination even exists.

GLOBAL CAPITALISM AND THE MALE GAZE

According to the powers of the internet, globalization is a process of interaction and integration among the people, companies, and government of different nations, a process driven by international trade and investment and aided by information technology. From a Marxian lens, however, globalization can be said to encompass the process of bourgeoisie countries (i.e., the West) exploiting proletariat countries (the global south, many parts of Latin America and Asia) through the spread of capitalism solely for the benefit of the bourgeoisie. A crucial point to remember, for this section and the ones outlined above: people in power do not want to give it up – rather, they have an invested interest in maintaining that power, and do so through the internalized subordination of the powerless. Bourgeoisie both trick (believe in the capitalist dream!) and force (you must sell your labor power in order to survive) the proletariat; men both trick and force the women, and, globally powerful countries both trick and force the developing countries. It’s the nature of the capitalist game.

So where does this come into play with South Korean plastic surgery? The (Western) male gaze.

The “male gaze” is most often associated with Laura Mulvey’s famous 1975 essay, ‘Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema’. Mulvey argues that, in film, men are the watchers while women are the watched. Thus, the vantage point of cinema at the time was constructed with a male audience in mind. This resulted in women being construed as an object of male viewership, in whatever form males found most pleasing. Of course, Mulvey’s essay focused on film, but her basic concept has been stretched to apply to nearly every facet of media we have today. Who controls what the women in porn, in advertisements, or even the “status quo” look like? The answer is men. And why is this? Because the idea of the male gaze has yet to die off; despite documented female viewership of movies and pornography, for example, the “vantage point” is still assumed to be that of a male – what males find interesting, beautiful, provocative, exciting, and so forth.

This continual use of a “male gaze” to construct images of women can be traced to MacKinnon’s arguments about the internalized nature of female subordination. Without a doubt, makeup advertisements are targeted towards women as the audience, and not men – so where is the male gaze in these circumstances, some skeptics may ask. According to the unequal gender relation, women are consciously self-conscious, while remaining unconscious of the male gaze’s role in their own perceptions of what it means to be a woman. This is a difficult concept, so I’ll outline it more briefly:

1. the idea of “women need to be beautiful” was started, at the capitalist level (that is, at the level of advertisements and dissemination of ideas to the general public), by men, because women at that time were not able to take part in the corporate discussion (they were forced to remain at home, with the children).

2. the idea of what kind of beautiful women need to be was thus also started (at the capitalist level) , necessarily, by men.

3. for any cult movement to work, you need to convince your followers (in one way or another) that they must accept your conditions, or else. This works in Marxian terms, as the bourgeoisie controlled the money and “convinced” proletariats that if they wanted food, they must work in order to “earn” it. If you are a cult leader and you want to convince everyone to drink the punch with you, you must first make them believe that they are benefiting somehow and that their lives will be worse off without doing so.

4. If men simply said “women need to be X type of beautiful” and left it at that, women would probably stare blankly. Hence, men needed to come up with a way to convince women to buy their bullshit. Protip method: come up with an idea of love, disseminate it to the public, and socially ostracize women who don’t meet your (i.e., men’s’) needs. This creates a demand for a prototypical woman that men are completely in charge of, and thus the standards women are subject to.

5. Complete refusal to “buy in” is often not an option for the oppressed – a  woman might say to herself, “screw beauty standards, I want to grow a full mustache”, but what will the social reactions to her action be? Similarly, a country might say “screw capitalism, we’ll do it our own way”, but what is typically the West’s reaction to that?

6.  The “beauty standard” is disseminated to the masses (i.e., through media, advertisements, etc) largely by men, because men by and far, remain the ones with the most corporate ownership, power and influence, etc.

7. no idea materializes out of nowhere; everything (according to Marx) is a struggle between one class or another, and women (often regarded as “second-class citizens) are no exception; thus, the idea that women need to be beautiful in order to be loved and accepted was created by men and continues to be enforced by men – who stands to benefit from a beautiful woman? What kind of prestige does a beautiful woman enjoy?

8. The illusion of choice confounds the exploitation – women feel free to make autonomous choices about their appearance, especially under capitalism, and yet they are voluntarily subjecting themselves by trying to appeal to a beauty standard which is profoundly not their own, and ever-changing to meet instead the needs of the male consumers.

I’d like to note now that not all men are aggressors, NOR is it that only men are aggressors – unfortunately, many women are aggressors to other women! This, according to Marx and MacKinnon, is simply a demonstration of the incredible magnitude that the powerful (bourgeoisie/men) are able to influence – how many workers do you know who will encourage the “work hard and it will pay off” mantra? Likewise, how many women do you know who will encourage to other women the “be beautiful/play your cards right and a man will come sweep you off your feet” mantra?

In terms of globalization, the West was among the first to develop (when compared to Africa, Asia, Latin America, etc. – I am not saying that these other countries didn’t possess extremely advanced methods of trade, language, mathematics, and technology, because they did! I mean only in a modern industrial capitalistic sense). Because of this, it possessed a unique power that other countries industrializing do not – namely, the power to define. This is a central point in critical theory, as the powerful are unique in their position to define the status quo. As such, the West exhibited an unrivaled influence upon other countries to do as they did, spreading all the bourgeoisie misinformation and false expectation onto other countries as the powerful spread upon the powerful here. Some parts of Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East (most notably Israel and Turkey) were quick to jump on the bandwagon, and because of it enjoy a moderate level of exploitation to this day. Others were not so fortunate. South Korea is one of those more economically fortunate Asian countries, like Japan, who “embraced” the capitalistic standard. This means that they are subject to the same criticisms of industrial capitalism that Marx leveraged upon the West. But every culture is different, and requires, like MacKinnon argued, an analysis that is distinct to the population concerned that exists alongside the larger struggle of reconciling class conflict under Marxian terms.

So, let’s look at South Korean exploitation, alienation, and cultural dynamics.

In South Korea, beauty, for women, means much more than aesthetic success – it means professional and economic success as well. Korean media and the rise in popularity of K-Pop music has resulted in an aesthetic that retains key aspects of the Western male gaze (such as an emphasis on light skin and large eyes), but at the same time, is completely unique. Thanks to this rise in popularity of Korean music and culture, the South Korean beauty paradigm has quickly spread across East Asia and the West’s standards of Asian beauty. Many have noted the increasing synonymy between South Korea and medical tourism, as it is not uncommon today for non-South Koreans to travel there specifically for the purpose of prestigious cosmetic treatment. According to VICE news, plastic surgery in South Korea is much, much more than a superficial beauty standard: it seeps into the sectors of professional and even academic success, with South Korean social norms now representing an ideal of the successful women as necessarily being beautiful by “South Korean” standards. Whereas we say in the U.S. that if two equally qualified people are applying for a job, the one with a college degree will get it, in South Korea, they say that if two equally qualified people are applying for a job, the one who is more attractive will get the job. Hence, enrolling your (female) child in tutoring programs and extracurricular activities is no longer a key for ensuring their economic success as adults, as it is now necessary to get them plastic surgery as well. 

Take one look at an average advertisement (in magazines, TV, or the subway, etc.) and you will see clear evidence of the western male gaze’s effect on another country’s standard of beauty as a result of western globalization:

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At the same time, there exists this cultural beauty standard that is different from our own, both in terms of aesthetics, but, more importantly, in terms of cultural reasons behind that beauty standard. As far as South Korea is concerned, plastic surgery is just a rapidly effective means of obtaining the end goal – namely, increasing one’s sexual bargaining power via physical desirability to men, and thus obtaining access to the means of production and love. From this perspective, South Korean women may be acting rationally, by using the tools available to them, given the irrational system (sexual exploitation) that they, as women, are born into. Such “rational self-objectification” is seen not just in South Korea, but across the world, and we cannot be quick to point out another culture’s perceived faults without considering the similarities within our own.

The Global Care Chain: The Chains of Exploited and Alienated Caregivers and Housekeepers

Global Care Chain

By: Raeshell Duru

Womanhood has long been synonymous with domesticity. Even today, as the number of women continues to increase in the the workforce, a woman is still expected to balance the demands of work and home. Women essentially are expected to become 24 hour working machine. For many women, especially here in the United States, the answer to this dilemma is to seek help. In this one conscious decision of one woman to pay or elicit help, she pulls another woman away from her home leaving a gap in her home -which then causes her to have to seek help and the chain begins. No women in the chain escapes alienation and exploitation – even the original link may become alienated from her home or children. Exploitation occurs as the pay decreases as you go down the chain – which inevitably leads to some source working for free (such as a daughter taking care of her younger siblings or old grandmother taking care of her grandchildren). Each woman is integral part of the previous links ability to do the given job of domesticity – but why must this process be so closely linked to womanhood? If men were involved in the demands of home wouldn’t more families be able do with caregivers and housekeepers? The answer I offer up is: YES!!! In making men a part of the home – not just members in the home – this vicious cycle that pulls millions of immigrant women from their homes and let’s their children know them are more than breadwinners.

 

Sources for the Infrographic:

Global Commission on International Migration (2005, September ). Global Care Chains: A Critical Introduction. Global Migration Perspectives,  44, 1-19. Retrieved from http://www.refworld.org/docid/435f85a84.html

Goldberg, M. (2009, September 3). The Real Nanny Diaries. The American Prospect. Retrieved from http://prospect.org/

UN Women (2011, May). Concept Note of Gender and Migration: Care Workers at the Interface of Migration and Development. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.unwomen.org/~/media/Headquarters/Media/Stories/en/conceptnotegenderandmigrationcareworkersatpdf.pdf

Why the world should care about FGM?

ATTENTION: This blog contents contain some explicit pictures and topics. If you are eating or having a nice social time with people right now, you may want to read this later or take one big breath.

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By Rumika Suzuki

Whether you are a feminist or not, you still need to know about FGM, and its impact on 125 million girls and women. Female Genital Mutilation is predominantly practiced in Africa along with regions of the Middle East and Asia. Across these countries, most daughters have had their genitalia cut, with some flesh removed before ages 5-14. It is never ok under any circumstance to disfigure a female body part against their will. Here’s why we all should talk about FGM.

1. It’s definitely harmful.

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There are four types of FGM surgery defined by the World Health Organization (WHO). Type I and II are the most common procedures. It is estimated that 80% of women have experienced either procedure. Type III is known as the most extreme method, and 15% of women have undergone it. The WHO also identifies all other harmful procedures to female genitalia such as pricking, piercing, incising, scraping, and cauterization as Type IV.

2. Because it’s intentional violence against young women.

The WHO defined FGM as “all procedures that involve partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons.”*1 Since 2008, the WHO is particularly concerned about the increasing trend of FGM and has begun alerting medically trained personnel to stop performing those procedures. The global institution is urging to terminate FGM related rituals. Nevertheless, why is it so difficult to prohibit apparent violence against woman?

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3.Traditional values and cultural beliefs say, “You must do it.”

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Bleeding, pain, and the daughter’s opinion do not matter in the decision. FGM is conducted by traditional practitioners (often parents or relatives of the young daughter or leaders in a village) who believe all women in the world cut their genitalia for the sake of goodness (no joke). The UNICEF report in 2013 pointed out that one of the factors delaying the end of FGM is the pressure to conform to group norms and social orders. *2 For this reason, it is difficult for individual households to stop the practice on their own.

 

4.It can lead to death, HIV transmission, infection, septicemia, tetanus, extreme pain during period and urination, and high accident rate during childbirth.

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These are all potential outcomes due to FGM. Coercive practice of FGM also damages the integrity and dignity of young women for a lifelong period. The injured young girls also struggle with mental disorders including traumatic stress, depression, and memory loss due to the lack of aftercare by medical specialists.

 

5. It is a global danger to women’s rights.

Despite the international involvement, cultural belief is a huge factor why FGM still happens today. In “Infidel,” the author, Ayaan Hirsi Ali elaborates her own experience when she was five. When her parents were gone for a week, her grandma cut and sewed her genitalia to preserve her “purity.” Including Ayaan’s grandma, older people who are eager to prolong FGM tradition, tend to believe that children become healthy and fertile once they undergo the surgery.

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Social stigma is another common reason for doing FGM.  Non-FGM women are treated as prostitutes and threatened that they can’t get married in most rural villages and isolated families. We need a mechanism to destruct the system that slows women’s social mobility; a system perpetuating social hierarchy of vulnerable girls.

 

 6. Is the world capable to terminate FGM?

We should believe that FGM will not exist in the near future. To make this happen, we can ally with the women and support progressive people (such as Pastoralist Child Foundation)to make their voice be heard to a broader audience. Because of a social obligation and a widespread belief in the area, more concerns and voices of individuals outside the closed community are needed to threaten the authority and the advocates of FGM. Listen to these people, go outside, tell your neighbors.

In addition, Synodos, a Japanese academic online journal, reported a case study in Sudan that found that there is less FGM occurrence in areas with higher educational standards and educated parents.*3 As people get more educated, less power FGM holds.

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Educational knowledge and free ideology that can address to end FGM are necessary to reduce the FGM proponents. The power and actions of individuals are more potent than prohibition created by law.

 

References:

*1 World Health Organization Female Genital Mutilation

*2 UNICEF Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting: A statistical overview and exploration of the dynamics of change 

*3 Synodos article http://synodos.jp/international/5352

Our Bad, Now We Have To Fix It

Our bad, our mistake

By: Johanna Lopez

This picture collage is suppose to represent the overarching issues that have caused refugee migration to increase along the Southern U.S. border. The main issues range from economic to social and psychological, and we can trace that back to globalization. The effect and desires of countries to reach the standards of the power players like the United States, have resulted in an unavoidable humanitarian crisis that is not being addressed properly. Resulting in broken systems, family units, and most importantly, individuals. Had globalization not crossed paths with Mexico, Central, and South America, as well as other countries around the world, the story would be a much different one.

Global Resistance in Solidarity with Ferguson

By: Jaclyn Sisto

Follow this link to see an interactive map of the global resistances and protests that followed the events that happened in Ferguson.

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The protests in Ferguson following the shooting of 18 year old Michael Brown have sparked nationwide conversations about police brutality and race issues. These conversations have spread with the help of social media to different parts of the world. The reactions differ, but here are some of the best.

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(Taken at a solidarity march and rally in Houston, Texas)

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(Taken during a solidarity rally in Boston, Massachusetts)

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(Exiled Tibetan monks travel from India to Ferguson in an act of solidarity)

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(Taken at the Champions League match; Arsenal v Besiktas)

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(Taken outside the US Embassy in London, England)

Issues of race, class, and inequality permeate through global society. They are issues that many people can relate to personally. The bravery of the people protesting in Ferguson are making it possible for other marginalized groups to stand up and speak in both solidarity for the people in Ferguson and also to advocate for their own issues.

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Fair Trade Vs. Coffee Exploitation

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By: Maddie Lobdell

The present system for importing cocoa and coffee is very exploitative of poor farmers. Between farmers and consumers are multinational corporations that are cushioned against market swings and are emotionally detached from how the market impoverishes millions of people. The consumer is increasingly unwilling to be apart of this; which is what the fair trade system is used for.

The Fair Trade system aims to give family farmers a fairer wage challenging large plantations and multi-national corporations. It wants a fair exchange between the consumer and the farmer. Organizations involved say it is working; it is empowering farmers to create a powerful export business and make higher prices; up to two or three times. It is very controversial because it is shown to give farmers more money. The question is, does it really make a big enough difference, and can we get enough consumers to get behind the idea of buying more expensive coffee. If enough people are aware, and get behind the fair trade system, it can make a difference. Even though some farmers receive only $1.26 over $1.10, the small amount more they make per pound will add up and can be extremely beneficial to them. It may be a small addition, but it will help the impoverished farmers.

One of the worst parts of the system is the manner that which multi-national corporations mask the way they exploit the workers. They loan the peasants small amounts of cash in return for their harvest in a no-haggling transaction, but consumers do not know this because they call it a co-operative. Thus, making it look like they are assisting the farmers.

 

3 Reasons Why Women Don’t Think They’re Oppressed

3 Reasons Why Muslim Women Don’t Think They’re Oppressed

By Breyana Fajota

The Gallup Organization released their findings of a survey conducted in 2005 of women in 8 predominantly Muslim countries.posted on Sept. 14, 2014, at 12:20 p.m.

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BUZZFEED USER

This post was created by a user and has not been vetted or endorsed by BuzzFeed’s editorial staff. BuzzFeed Community is a place where anyone can post awesome lists and creations.” Learn more or post your buzz!

1. Most Muslim women associate sex equality with the West.

Most Muslim women associate sex equality with the West.

78% of Moroccan women,
71% of Lebanese women, and
48% of Saudi women polled linked legal equality with the West.

2. Majority of the women polled love their religion

Majority of the women polled love their religion

53% of Pakistan women polled claimed their attachment to their religious beliefs were their country’s most admirable trait.
59% of Egypt women polled said their love of their religion was the best “aspect of their country”.

3. Sex issues are NOT the most important issue to Muslim women

Sex issues are NOT the most important issue to Muslim women

More than 8,000 face-to-face interviews found that many women did not see sex issues as the priority issue. Majority of Muslim women polled said that “the lack of unity among Muslim nations, violent extremism, and political and economic corruptions” were the main issues.

This post was created by a user and has not been vetted or endorsed by BuzzFeed’s editorial staff. BuzzFeed Community is a place where anyone can post awesome lists and creations.Learn more or post your buzz!

 

Some women believe that other women around the world who do not have the same exact rights as them are oppressed. However, many women who live in countries in the Middle East and other parts of the world do not feel the same. There are differences in cultures and lifestyles which may have some think that others are unhappy when they really aren’t. These misunderstandings are important in having those in the West to respect more the religions and cultures of those in the East.

NAFTA and Immigration

 

NAFTA Infographic
NAFTA Infographic

By: Erin Savoia

I chose to create an infographic explaining the relationship between NAFTA and immigration into the United States from Mexico. NAFTA (the North American Free Trade Agreement) was signed into law January of 1994. Proponents of the agreement assured critics that it would improve the U.S. economy while stimulating Mexico’s. Supporters argued that it would allow cheap foreign products to be imported to the U.S. from Mexico, boosting the Mexican economy in the name of globalization. The newly stimulated Mexican economy would then in turn expand the Mexican job market, leading to less immigration to the United States. However, as it turns out, NAFTA has benefited American corporations while oppressing Mexican workers. This is reflective of the notion that “opportunities for economic advance, as they present themselves serially to one [actor] after another, do not constitute equivalent opportunities for economic advance for all” (Arrighi, Silver, and Brewer, 2007, p.325). In other words, the trade agreement was set up to benefit those already in power (American corporations) while taking advantage of those with less power (Mexican workers).

Each One Teach One (Explanation and References)

Diversity UP

For this project, Diversity UP will be exploring the presence (or lack there of) of diversity on the University of Portland campus. We will be exploring this topic through the lens of institutional racism in the education system and its adverse effects on the student population’s education experience. The evidence that we will be gathering will be, statistics from admissions, interviews on campus, and scholastic evidence surrounding this topic. An understanding of this topic is important to the greater understanding of diversity on college campuses and why it is important to have a well-rounded education available to all people.

Members: Aine Brooks, Adam Brizzolara, Colin Guzman, Caameron Nakasane