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Women in Paraguay

Women in Paraguay face challenges to their rights. Faced by socioeconomic inequalities and gender pay gap, they experienced significant cultural changes since 1990 as a result of constitutional and legal expansions of women's rights and evolving cultural attitudes. The legal and government institutions currently existing in Paraguay were developed in part through the efforts of feminist organizations in the country that held significant awareness-raising campaigns during the 1990s to formalize the guarantees of women's rights.[4] UN Women supports the Paraguayan State in the challenge to extend women's rights, to fight for gender equality, as well as women's empowerment. It also ensures that women's voices are heard and create more opportunities for women.

Women in Paraguay
Guarani indigenous women
General Statistics
Maternal mortality (per 100,000)99 (2010)
Women in parliament15% (2014)[1]
Women over 25 with secondary education35.0% (2010)
Women in labour force57.9% (2011)
Gender Inequality Index[2]
Value0.445 (2021)
Rank111th out of 191
Global Gender Gap Index[3]
Value0.707 (2022)
Rank80th out of 146

In 2015, UN developed its cooperation with state agencies that focused on the empowerment of women. The UN Women cooperation agenda was put into practice by means of the following strategies such as leadership and political participation for women in Paraguay.

Education edit

Illiteracy rates for women in Paraguay are higher than those of men. This is especially prominent in the older generations of the Paraguay population. The gender gap in education has decreased in recent years. Among youth aged 15 to 24 years, the literacy rate is 99% for both males and females. Young people of both sexes begin dropping out of the education system at significant rates following primary levels and are unlikely to pursue education beyond the secondary level.[5] As of 2010, of the population 15 and over, 92.9% of women and 94.8% of men were literate.[6]

Employment edit

 
A woman shopkeeper in Paraguay.

Women's salaries in relation to men's are the second-lowest in Latin America.[7] This is despite the fact that women make up 74% of Paraguay's labour force.[8]

Sexual harassment and discrimination against women in the workplace are common issues in Paraguay. The Labor Code prohibits, but does not criminalize, discrimination or harassment on the basis of sex. Complaints are commonly settled privately. The Secretariat of Women's Affairs occasionally operates programs supporting women's access to employment, social security, housing, land ownership and business opportunities.[9]

Marriage edit

Early marriage is common in Paraguay. A 2004 United Nations report estimated that 17 percent of girls between 15 and 19 years of age were married, divorced or widowed. The legal age for marriage in Paraguay is 16.[4]

Divorce edit

Divorce was legalized in Paraguay in 1991.[10] Paraguay was one of the last countries to legalize divorce, both in the world and in Latin America. Divorce was also legalized in 1991 in Colombia;[11] across Latin America it was only Chile that had not legalized it by that time, subsequently doing so in 2004.[12] The legalization of divorce in Paraguay had been strongly opposed by the Roman Catholic Church. Divorce rates in Paraguay remain well below worldwide averages, and are the lowest in Latin America.[7]

Maternity edit

 
An indigenous woman and child. Fertility rates are higher in rural areas and among indigenous women.

Fertility rates in Paraguay were historically high relative to other countries in the Latin American region prior to the 1990s, and have significantly declined since then with an estimated rate of 2.9 in 2004. Research has found that births before marriage are common in Paraguay, although this phenomenon is decreasing. One study established that birth rates before a first marriage were 23, 24, and 21 percent, based on 2004, 1998, and 1995–96 data.[13] The maternal mortality rate in Paraguay is 99 deaths/100,000 live births (as of 2010).[14]

Sexuality and birth control edit

Declining cultural influence of the Roman Catholic Church in Paraguay has initiated a change in attitudes towards women's sexuality and the use of birth control. The use of modern contraceptive methods including birth control pills, condoms, and IUDs, increased from a rate of 43% in 1996 to more than 60% by 2004.[13] Adultery was decriminalized in 1990.[15] The HIV/AIDS rate is 0.3% for adults (aged 15–49), as of 2012 estimates.[16]

Abortion remains illegal in Paraguay, with exceptional cases where it can be demonstrated that the life of the mother is in danger.[17][18]

Financial matters edit

Agriculture is a significant component of Paraguay's economy and an important source of income, with approximately 45% of Paraguay's workforce being employed in agriculture. Access to land ownership has been problematic for women in Paraguay. However, there are no legal restrictions on female land ownership, although women are half as likely as men to be approved for loans to buy land. The 2002 Agrarian Act includes provisions intended to strengthen women's rights in this regard.[4]

Politics edit

 
Gloria Rubìn, Paraguay's Minister of the Women's Secretariat, supports reforms that improve women's rights.

Women in Paraguay have no legal restrictions on holding political office. Women have served in the government as members of the Congress (as National Deputies and as Senators), as governors, as heads of ministries, and there has been one female Supreme Court judge. They are underrepresented in comparison to male members of the government, however, and even relative to the rates of female representation in the governments of other countries of Latin America. Indeed, Paraguay has one of the lowest percentage of women in parliament in Latin America, significantly lower than neighboring Argentina and Bolivia, although higher than Brazil.[19] In 1993 the Paraguayan state created a Secretariat for Women's Affairs within the Office of the President.[20] This secretariat was raised to the status of a Ministry of Women by Act No. 4675, in 2012.[21]

Violence against women edit

Domestic violence edit

Domestic abuse is a common issue in Paraguay. The legal response of Paraguay to domestic violence has been minimal. Paraguay enacted Law No. 1,600 Against Domestic Violence (Ley No 1.600 contra la Violencia Doméstica) in 2000. While the Criminal Code provides for a crime of domestic violence, this crime has a narrow definition as physical violence that is carried out habitually, and is punishable only by a fine.[22][23] As of 2014, there have been increasing calls, from both inside and outside of the country, for the enactment of a comprehensive law against violence against women.[24][25][26][27][28][29]

Human trafficking edit

Human trafficking for the purposes of forcing young women into prostitution is a pre-existing issue. In recent years, human trafficking networks organized by Taiwanese and Chinese nationals have been blocked by Paraguayan law enforcement, with Paraguayan women being trafficked to Brazil, Argentina, or Spain to work in brothels. There are no precise estimates of the number of women who are victims of human trafficking, but anecdotal estimates suggest that several hundred Paraguayan women are smuggled out of the country annually. Underage girls are also trafficked within Paraguay and to neighbouring countries as domestic servants.[9]

Women's rights history in Paraguay edit

The movement to expand women's rights in Paraguay grew significantly in the 1920s, in large part through the work of María Felicidad González, who represented her country at a feminist conference in Baltimore, in 1922. One year earlier, on April 26, 1921, she opened the Centro Femenino del Paraguay (CFP) (Women's Centre of Paraguay). Influenced by women's rights movements in North America and Europe, Paraguayan women also began to mobilize and claim their rights. During this period, feminism was associated with the Revolutionary Febrerista Party.

Paraguayan Women's Union edit

In 1936, during the Revolution of February 17, 1936, the Unión Femenina del Paraguay (UFP) (Paraguayan Women's Union) was created. It was founded on April 26, 15 years after the founding of the Women's Centre of Paraguay, at a meeting that took place at the Colegio Nacional de la Capital, in Asunción. The first president of the Union was Maria F. de Casati.

The Union, in addition to its feminist cause, was openly socialist and part of the wider changes resulting from the Revolution of February 17, 1936. In fact, María F. de Casati stated:

Our feminist movement was born on February 17, with the Revolution that was a clarion call to the popular soul, which opened to everyone the hope for social improvement".[30]

Among the participants in the Union were Elena Freis de Barthe, Lorenza C. de Gaona, and Luisa vda. de Felip. The Union published a periodical called Por la Mujer (For Women), which was the first feminist periodical in Paraguay. Among other causes, it promoted women's suffrage and equality of the sexes.

The Union held meetings in the capitol and throughout Paraguay to raise awareness among women about their rights. Ties were strengthened with other feminist groups in the Americas, including: Asociación Argentina Pro-Sufragio Femenino, the Confederación Femenina de la Paz Americana, Liga Femenina Pro-Union Americana, the Asociación Argentina Pro Paz, and the Asociación Cristiana Femenina.

In 1937, with the fall of the government that came into power following the Revolution of February 17, 1936, the Union was driven to separate.

Women's Democratic Union edit

After passing several years between 1940 and 1945 without a women's rights organization, the Unión Democrática de Mujeres (UDM) (Women's Democratic Union) was founded on December 19, 1946. It grew out of the Agrupación de Mujeres Febrerista Residentes en Montevideo (AMFRM) (Association of Febrerista Women Living in Montevideo), which was connected to the Concentración Revolucionaria Febrerista, a Febrerista exile group based out of Montevideo, Uruguay. The founders of this group included Carmen Soler, Esther Ballestrino, Lilia Freis, and several others. This group was pressured to disband following the Paraguayan Civil War in 1947.

Febrerista Women's Emancipation Movement edit

The Movimiento Femenino Febrerista de Emancipación (MFFE) (Febrerista Women's Emancipation Movement) was founded in 1949, and it was the successor organization to the Agrupación de Mujeres Febreristas Residentes en Montevideo. It published a periodical, Correspondencia. The MFFE remained associated with the Concentración Revolucionaria Febrerista group. In 1951, the Febrerista Revolutionary Party was founded, and the MFFE was integrated with it.

Women's suffrage was gained in Paraguay in 1961, primarily because the strongarm president, Alfredo Stroessner, lacking the approval of his male constituents, sought to bolster his support through women voters.[31]

Current feminist organizations edit

In recent years, almost all major political parties in Paraguay have included groups focussed on women's rights issues. Many members of these groups were part of the Mujeres por la Alianza (Women for the Alliance) movement that supported the candidacy of Fernando Lugo, on April 20, 2008.[32]

Bibliography edit

  • Juan Speratti: Feminismo, Editorial Litocolor, Asunción, 1989

References edit

  1. ^ "Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments (%) | Data". data.worldbank.org.
  2. ^ "Human Development Report 2021/2022" (PDF). HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORTS. Retrieved 13 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Global Gender Gap Report 2022" (PDF). World Economic Forum. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
  4. ^ a b c "Social Institutions and Gender Index". genderindex.org. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  5. ^ "At a glance: Paraguay statistics". UNICEF. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-11-24. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  7. ^ a b "2008 Legatum Prosperity Index". Legatum. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  8. ^ "Paraguay Makes Step Forward For Women's". www.eurasiareview.com. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  9. ^ a b "Paraguay". U.S. State Department. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  10. ^ Sex and the State: Abortion, Divorce, and the Family Under Latin. American Dictatorships and Democracies, by Mala Htun, pp 102
  11. ^ "Colombia profile - Timeline". BBC News. August 8, 2018.
  12. ^ "Chile introduces right to divorce". November 18, 2004 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  13. ^ a b Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp & Mercedes Melian. "Fertility decline in Paraguay" (PDF). USAID. Retrieved September 4, 2011.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-18. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  15. ^ "Nuevo Código eliminó delitos machistas y discriminatorios".
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-12-21. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  17. ^ "Abortion in Paraguay". RESURJ.
  18. ^ "Paraguay: Abortion Law". Women on Waves.
  19. ^ "Women in Parliaments: World Classification". archive.ipu.org.
  20. ^ Inter-American Commission of Human Rights (9 March 2021). "Third Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Paraguay". Organization of American States.
  21. ^ Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (2017). "Concluding observations on the seventh periodic report of Paraguay". Retrieved 28 August 2021.
  22. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Paraguay: Protection available to victims of domestic violence; effectiveness of the law against domestic violence; whether the courts prosecute perpetrators of such violence". Refworld.
  23. ^ "Paraguay Makes Step Forward For Women's And Indigenous Rights – Analysis – Eurasia Review".
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-05-11. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  25. ^ "Secretaría de Género". Poder Judicial.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  27. ^ "Diario HOY | A Paraguay "le urge" una ley contra violencia de género". www.hoy.com.py.
  28. ^ "Reclaman ley integral contra la violencia hacia las mujeres". Paraguay.com. Retrieved 2022-07-24.
  29. ^ "Un salto legal contra la violencia hacia las mujeres - Notas - ABC Color". www.abc.com.py.
  30. ^ Juan Speratti: Feminismo, Editorial Litocolor, Asunción, 1989
  31. ^ Przeworski, Adam; Shin, Kong Joo; Xi, Tianyang (September 26, 2013). (PDF). Faculdade de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas. São Paulo, Brazil: Universidade de São Paulo. p. 22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2017. Retrieved 9 September 2017.
  32. ^ "Inicio". Presidencia de la República del Paraguay.

External links edit

  • Characteristics of typical Paraguayan woman

women, paraguay, face, challenges, their, rights, faced, socioeconomic, inequalities, gender, they, experienced, significant, cultural, changes, since, 1990, result, constitutional, legal, expansions, women, rights, evolving, cultural, attitudes, legal, govern. Women in Paraguay face challenges to their rights Faced by socioeconomic inequalities and gender pay gap they experienced significant cultural changes since 1990 as a result of constitutional and legal expansions of women s rights and evolving cultural attitudes The legal and government institutions currently existing in Paraguay were developed in part through the efforts of feminist organizations in the country that held significant awareness raising campaigns during the 1990s to formalize the guarantees of women s rights 4 UN Women supports the Paraguayan State in the challenge to extend women s rights to fight for gender equality as well as women s empowerment It also ensures that women s voices are heard and create more opportunities for women Women in ParaguayGuarani indigenous womenGeneral StatisticsMaternal mortality per 100 000 99 2010 Women in parliament15 2014 1 Women over 25 with secondary education35 0 2010 Women in labour force57 9 2011 Gender Inequality Index 2 Value0 445 2021 Rank111th out of 191Global Gender Gap Index 3 Value0 707 2022 Rank80th out of 146 In 2015 UN developed its cooperation with state agencies that focused on the empowerment of women The UN Women cooperation agenda was put into practice by means of the following strategies such as leadership and political participation for women in Paraguay Contents 1 Education 2 Employment 3 Marriage 4 Divorce 5 Maternity 6 Sexuality and birth control 7 Financial matters 8 Politics 9 Violence against women 9 1 Domestic violence 9 2 Human trafficking 10 Women s rights history in Paraguay 10 1 Paraguayan Women s Union 10 2 Women s Democratic Union 10 3 Febrerista Women s Emancipation Movement 10 4 Current feminist organizations 11 Bibliography 12 References 13 External linksEducation editIlliteracy rates for women in Paraguay are higher than those of men This is especially prominent in the older generations of the Paraguay population The gender gap in education has decreased in recent years Among youth aged 15 to 24 years the literacy rate is 99 for both males and females Young people of both sexes begin dropping out of the education system at significant rates following primary levels and are unlikely to pursue education beyond the secondary level 5 As of 2010 of the population 15 and over 92 9 of women and 94 8 of men were literate 6 Employment edit nbsp A woman shopkeeper in Paraguay Women s salaries in relation to men s are the second lowest in Latin America 7 This is despite the fact that women make up 74 of Paraguay s labour force 8 Sexual harassment and discrimination against women in the workplace are common issues in Paraguay The Labor Code prohibits but does not criminalize discrimination or harassment on the basis of sex Complaints are commonly settled privately The Secretariat of Women s Affairs occasionally operates programs supporting women s access to employment social security housing land ownership and business opportunities 9 Marriage editEarly marriage is common in Paraguay A 2004 United Nations report estimated that 17 percent of girls between 15 and 19 years of age were married divorced or widowed The legal age for marriage in Paraguay is 16 4 Divorce editDivorce was legalized in Paraguay in 1991 10 Paraguay was one of the last countries to legalize divorce both in the world and in Latin America Divorce was also legalized in 1991 in Colombia 11 across Latin America it was only Chile that had not legalized it by that time subsequently doing so in 2004 12 The legalization of divorce in Paraguay had been strongly opposed by the Roman Catholic Church Divorce rates in Paraguay remain well below worldwide averages and are the lowest in Latin America 7 Maternity edit nbsp An indigenous woman and child Fertility rates are higher in rural areas and among indigenous women Fertility rates in Paraguay were historically high relative to other countries in the Latin American region prior to the 1990s and have significantly declined since then with an estimated rate of 2 9 in 2004 Research has found that births before marriage are common in Paraguay although this phenomenon is decreasing One study established that birth rates before a first marriage were 23 24 and 21 percent based on 2004 1998 and 1995 96 data 13 The maternal mortality rate in Paraguay is 99 deaths 100 000 live births as of 2010 14 Sexuality and birth control editFurther information Abortion in Paraguay Declining cultural influence of the Roman Catholic Church in Paraguay has initiated a change in attitudes towards women s sexuality and the use of birth control The use of modern contraceptive methods including birth control pills condoms and IUDs increased from a rate of 43 in 1996 to more than 60 by 2004 13 Adultery was decriminalized in 1990 15 The HIV AIDS rate is 0 3 for adults aged 15 49 as of 2012 estimates 16 Abortion remains illegal in Paraguay with exceptional cases where it can be demonstrated that the life of the mother is in danger 17 18 Financial matters editAgriculture is a significant component of Paraguay s economy and an important source of income with approximately 45 of Paraguay s workforce being employed in agriculture Access to land ownership has been problematic for women in Paraguay However there are no legal restrictions on female land ownership although women are half as likely as men to be approved for loans to buy land The 2002 Agrarian Act includes provisions intended to strengthen women s rights in this regard 4 Politics edit nbsp Gloria Rubin Paraguay s Minister of the Women s Secretariat supports reforms that improve women s rights Women in Paraguay have no legal restrictions on holding political office Women have served in the government as members of the Congress as National Deputies and as Senators as governors as heads of ministries and there has been one female Supreme Court judge They are underrepresented in comparison to male members of the government however and even relative to the rates of female representation in the governments of other countries of Latin America Indeed Paraguay has one of the lowest percentage of women in parliament in Latin America significantly lower than neighboring Argentina and Bolivia although higher than Brazil 19 In 1993 the Paraguayan state created a Secretariat for Women s Affairs within the Office of the President 20 This secretariat was raised to the status of a Ministry of Women by Act No 4675 in 2012 21 Violence against women editFurther information Domestic violence in Paraguay Domestic violence edit Domestic abuse is a common issue in Paraguay The legal response of Paraguay to domestic violence has been minimal Paraguay enacted Law No 1 600 Against Domestic Violence Ley No 1 600 contra la Violencia Domestica in 2000 While the Criminal Code provides for a crime of domestic violence this crime has a narrow definition as physical violence that is carried out habitually and is punishable only by a fine 22 23 As of 2014 there have been increasing calls from both inside and outside of the country for the enactment of a comprehensive law against violence against women 24 25 26 27 28 29 Human trafficking edit Human trafficking for the purposes of forcing young women into prostitution is a pre existing issue In recent years human trafficking networks organized by Taiwanese and Chinese nationals have been blocked by Paraguayan law enforcement with Paraguayan women being trafficked to Brazil Argentina or Spain to work in brothels There are no precise estimates of the number of women who are victims of human trafficking but anecdotal estimates suggest that several hundred Paraguayan women are smuggled out of the country annually Underage girls are also trafficked within Paraguay and to neighbouring countries as domestic servants 9 Women s rights history in Paraguay editThe movement to expand women s rights in Paraguay grew significantly in the 1920s in large part through the work of Maria Felicidad Gonzalez who represented her country at a feminist conference in Baltimore in 1922 One year earlier on April 26 1921 she opened the Centro Femenino del Paraguay CFP Women s Centre of Paraguay Influenced by women s rights movements in North America and Europe Paraguayan women also began to mobilize and claim their rights During this period feminism was associated with the Revolutionary Febrerista Party Paraguayan Women s Union edit In 1936 during the Revolution of February 17 1936 the Union Femenina del Paraguay UFP Paraguayan Women s Union was created It was founded on April 26 15 years after the founding of the Women s Centre of Paraguay at a meeting that took place at the Colegio Nacional de la Capital in Asuncion The first president of the Union was Maria F de Casati The Union in addition to its feminist cause was openly socialist and part of the wider changes resulting from the Revolution of February 17 1936 In fact Maria F de Casati stated Our feminist movement was born on February 17 with the Revolution that was a clarion call to the popular soul which opened to everyone the hope for social improvement 30 Among the participants in the Union were Elena Freis de Barthe Lorenza C de Gaona and Luisa vda de Felip The Union published a periodical called Por la Mujer For Women which was the first feminist periodical in Paraguay Among other causes it promoted women s suffrage and equality of the sexes The Union held meetings in the capitol and throughout Paraguay to raise awareness among women about their rights Ties were strengthened with other feminist groups in the Americas including Asociacion Argentina Pro Sufragio Femenino the Confederacion Femenina de la Paz Americana Liga Femenina Pro Union Americana the Asociacion Argentina Pro Paz and the Asociacion Cristiana Femenina In 1937 with the fall of the government that came into power following the Revolution of February 17 1936 the Union was driven to separate Women s Democratic Union edit After passing several years between 1940 and 1945 without a women s rights organization the Union Democratica de Mujeres UDM Women s Democratic Union was founded on December 19 1946 It grew out of the Agrupacion de Mujeres Febrerista Residentes en Montevideo AMFRM Association of Febrerista Women Living in Montevideo which was connected to the Concentracion Revolucionaria Febrerista a Febrerista exile group based out of Montevideo Uruguay The founders of this group included Carmen Soler Esther Ballestrino Lilia Freis and several others This group was pressured to disband following the Paraguayan Civil War in 1947 Febrerista Women s Emancipation Movement edit The Movimiento Femenino Febrerista de Emancipacion MFFE Febrerista Women s Emancipation Movement was founded in 1949 and it was the successor organization to the Agrupacion de Mujeres Febreristas Residentes en Montevideo It published a periodical Correspondencia The MFFE remained associated with the Concentracion Revolucionaria Febrerista group In 1951 the Febrerista Revolutionary Party was founded and the MFFE was integrated with it Women s suffrage was gained in Paraguay in 1961 primarily because the strongarm president Alfredo Stroessner lacking the approval of his male constituents sought to bolster his support through women voters 31 Current feminist organizations edit In recent years almost all major political parties in Paraguay have included groups focussed on women s rights issues Many members of these groups were part of the Mujeres por la Alianza Women for the Alliance movement that supported the candidacy of Fernando Lugo on April 20 2008 32 Bibliography editJuan Speratti Feminismo Editorial Litocolor Asuncion 1989References edit Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments Data data worldbank org Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORTS Retrieved 13 December 2022 Global Gender Gap Report 2022 PDF World Economic Forum Retrieved 23 February 2023 a b c Social Institutions and Gender Index genderindex org Retrieved September 4 2011 At a glance Paraguay statistics UNICEF Retrieved September 4 2011 The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 2016 11 24 Retrieved 2015 02 18 a b 2008 Legatum Prosperity Index Legatum Retrieved September 4 2011 Paraguay Makes Step Forward For Women s www eurasiareview com Retrieved September 4 2011 a b Paraguay U S State Department Retrieved September 4 2011 Sex and the State Abortion Divorce and the Family Under Latin American Dictatorships and Democracies by Mala Htun pp 102 Colombia profile Timeline BBC News August 8 2018 Chile introduces right to divorce November 18 2004 via news bbc co uk a b Kanako Ishida Paul Stupp amp Mercedes Melian Fertility decline in Paraguay PDF USAID Retrieved September 4 2011 The World Factbook Archived from the original on 2015 04 18 Retrieved 2015 02 18 Nuevo Codigo elimino delitos machistas y discriminatorios The World Factbook Archived from the original on 2014 12 21 Retrieved 2015 02 18 Abortion in Paraguay RESURJ Paraguay Abortion Law Women on Waves Women in Parliaments World Classification archive ipu org Inter American Commission of Human Rights 9 March 2021 Third Report on the Situation of Human Rights in Paraguay Organization of American States Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women 2017 Concluding observations on the seventh periodic report of Paraguay Retrieved 28 August 2021 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld Paraguay Protection available to victims of domestic violence effectiveness of the law against domestic violence whether the courts prosecute perpetrators of such violence Refworld Paraguay Makes Step Forward For Women s And Indigenous Rights Analysis Eurasia Review Decidamos 10 razones por las que Paraguay necesita una Ley integral contra la violencia hacia las mujeres Archived from the original on 2017 05 11 Retrieved 2015 02 18 Secretaria de Genero Poder Judicial Paraguay requiere ley contra violencia de genero dice representante de ONU Noticias ultima hora videos y fotos de Mundo en lainformacion com Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2015 02 18 Diario HOY A Paraguay le urge una ley contra violencia de genero www hoy com py Reclaman ley integral contra la violencia hacia las mujeres Paraguay com Retrieved 2022 07 24 Un salto legal contra la violencia hacia las mujeres Notas ABC Color www abc com py Juan Speratti Feminismo Editorial Litocolor Asuncion 1989 Przeworski Adam Shin Kong Joo Xi Tianyang September 26 2013 A Simple Partisan Calculus of Women s Suffrage PDF Faculdade de Filosofia Letras e Ciencias Humanas Sao Paulo Brazil Universidade de Sao Paulo p 22 Archived from the original PDF on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 9 September 2017 Inicio Presidencia de la Republica del Paraguay External links editCharacteristics of typical Paraguayan woman nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Women of Paraguay Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women in Paraguay amp oldid 1199818338 Women s rights history in Paraguay, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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