Thursday, 8 March 2018

Empathy as key value in International Women's Day

Today, 8th March 2018 is International Women’s Day. The fundamental values underpinning Women’s Day includes empathy among their list of 10 main values:  

“Justice, Dignity, Hope, Equality, Collaboration, Tenacity, Appreciation, Respect, Empathy,
Forgiveness”
For details on each value, see: https://www.internationalwomensday.com/Values

International Women’s Day captures the concept of empathy as being:

“EMPATHY

Seeking to understand others, caring for and valuing diversity, and appreciating difference are key to forging deep relationships to affect change. It's through the ability to understand and share the feelings of others that differing situations and perspectives can be grasped. International Women's Day calls for global understandings about the plight of women - the challenges faced, obstacles endured and changes desired for an inclusive and progressive world.”

This description echoes many claims I have been making throughout my research on empathy. I’ve brought out the importance of empathy for helping us gain a knowledge and understanding of others, overcoming the apparent barrier of understand others’ minds. I see an ethics of empathy as prior to an ethics of care because empathy is required for carrying out a good standard of care, hence empathy is the more foundational of the two. I have recently read an article which supports my view and includes the psychologist Carl Rogers:


This I found exciting because when I first wrote about empathy I didn’t know anything about Rogers on empathy because my discipline is philosophy so he wasn’t someone I heard mentioned. Empathy is not just putting yourself in another’s shoes it involves grasping the thoughts as well as feeling the emotions of the other so you are “Understanding the internal frame of reference of the other person, as well as the subjective way of decoding events…”1. Hence, I think empathy is vital in interpersonal relationships. However, it also has a broad application, such as being fundamental to the way doctors should convey distressing news, known as SPIKES, where E stands for empathy2. Psychology studies have shown that when doctors acquire a greater capacity for empathy, their standard of care for their patients significantly increases. Empathy is a concept that applies to both men and women because it is a capacity that can be learnt by either sex. So although I put forward a feminist ethics of empathy, my claims about empathy still hold true within the realms of society in general, independently of feminism.  

Nevertheless, as can be seen by the inclusion of empathy in International Women’s Day, empathy plays a central role in feminism and the fight for the rights of all women around the globe. This is one of the reasons that empathy is central to my feminist approach. I maintain that the concept of empathy is vital for inclusivity and progress in the world as it assists us in embracing every human being as valuable, regardless of diversity and difference. So I like how International Women’s Day has described empathy in a way that retains the balance of both keeping women’s rights as a main human rights concern (not subsidiary to other rights/issues) but without overlooking the importance of including and empathizing with women of all identities within the women’s movement.

The theme for International Women’s Day which starts today but continues all year round is #PressforProgress.

You can join me in pressing for progress by going to:



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