To become an independent person, work is necessary. Education is necessary to find work. In order to receive education, we need to attend school. In many countries, anyone can easily follow the list of independent steps as needed. For men, in most countries, they follow these steps and they become self-sustaining. For girls, it is not so. Many women in the world are independent, but men still dominate in most jobs.
As the Arab Development Organization stated, the women's group is working on many Arab countries to change the "remarkable women empowerment in the region" in many Arab countries. However, experts say that recent voting rights and advances in family law are not equal to grassroots women's movement victory, they are equivalent to "top-down" reforms by progressive leaders. Qatar and Bahrain have recently expanded their voting rights for women thanks to the changes promoted by Emil of the small Persian Gulf. Jordan and Morocco recently limited the right to divorce women at the request of the dominant monarch. King Abdullah II of Jordan and Mohamed VI of Morocco
An agenda for empowerment of women has been set up. This is based on the results of the World Conference on Three Women's Problems so far, but it is believed to be a major achievement in clearly demonstrating women's rights as human rights. The "Action Plan" includes a series of strategic objectives to eliminate discrimination against women and to achieve gender equality. It includes global political and legal strategies based on human rights framework. The "Action Plan" is the most comprehensive expression of women's efforts to human rights.
According to the Arab human rights report, the Arab countries are ranked lower in 'gender empowerment measures' than in other parts of the world other than sub-Saharan Africa. The statistical indicators created by the United Nations Development Program combine women's per capita income with the proportion of women's occupational and technical positions and parliamentary seats. Mr. Hawthorne said women in Arab countries had lower social and political status than other countries. But she also pointed out that the status of women in this area is "very different". She pointed out that women have the right to vote for a period of time in most countries of the Arab countries - even though many of their elections were openly democratic