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1. “It appears that more girls have been killed in the last fifty years, precisely because they were girls, than men were killed in all the battles of the twentieth century” (p. xvii). Why is the dire state of women in impoverished cultures, as set out by the authors in the introduction, also a great opportunity for them?
2. “The modern global slave trade is larger in absolute terms than the Atlantic slave trade in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries” (p. 11). Given the scale of the problem, what do Kristof and WuDunn suggest as reasonable efforts towards ending human trafficking?
3. What do the stories about Srey Momm and Srey Neth indicate about the complexities of the trafficking problem in places like Thailand and Cambodia? Why do Kristof and WuDunn say “it’s most productive to focus efforts on prevention and putting brothels out of business” (p. 45)?
4. What difficulties do “the new abolitionists,” like Sunitha Krishnan and Abbas Be, face in trying to shut down the brothel trade? How does Sunitha’s story highlight the kind of bravery required to save women from enslavement in brothels?
5. The judge in the rape and kidnapping case of Woineshet, in Ethiopia, disapproved of the fact that this young girl was insisting on prosecuting her rapist: “He wants to marry you. Why are you refusing?” (p. 65). How is this story emblematic of the much larger problem of “tradition” in countries like Ethiopia?
6. Kristof and WuDunn argue that “universities should make it a requirement that all graduates spend at least some time in the developing world” (p. 88), and that “time spent in Congo and Cambodia might not be as pleasant as in Paris, but it will be life-changing” (p. 89). Do you agree that young Americans should be required to widen their knowledge by direct experience? How might such a requirement change the lives of young Americans, and their view of poverty and privilege?
7. How does the story of Prudence Lemokouno illustrate the dangers of pregnancy and delivery in the developing world (pp. 109–13)? Does it seem an obvious and desirable principle that reproductive health should be considered an international human rights issue, as argued by Dr. Allan Rosenfield (p. 122)? What does the example of Sri Lanka prove about the possibilities of reducing women’s mortality rates in childbirth?
8. Muslim nations are among those in which women are most severely disadvantaged; so the authors directly address the question of whether Islam is misogynistic (p. 150). What do they conclude? What are the best ways to address the frustrations of women like Ellaha, who feel trapped in conservative Muslim cultures where women are at the mercy of their male relatives (pp. 156–57)? Is religion part of the reason for the oppression of women? Is it part of the solution?
9. The authors present a great deal of information about the troubles surrounding the education of girls. Discuss the thorny problems raised in chapter ten, “Investing in Education” (pp. 167–78), and the ways that Ann Cotton has succeeded in addressing many of them with her Camfed project in Zimbabwe (pp. 179–83).
10. Chapter Eleven, “Microcredit: The Financial Revolution,” focuses on the positive changes that are possible when you lend women money to start businesses, or when women have control of the family purse. Is it surprising to learn that when men control family spending, more is spent on beer and prostitutes, and when women are in control more is spent on food and education (pp. 192–93)? Does India’s law, assuring that one third of village leaders will be women, suggest that putting more women in positions of political power will make the world a better place for children?
11. Thomas Clarkson and William Wilberforce worked tirelessly to expose the truths about the cruel and gruesome conditions endured by the slaves in the British slave trade (pp. 235–36). Their work is a model for the political effectiveness of bringing atrocities to the forefront of the public mind and conscience. What realities were brought to light for you, as you read this book? What details or stories would you consider most provocative, disturbing, or inspiring for middle-class readers?
12. With the stories they recount in this book, Kristof and WuDunn hope to convince readers to help bring about changes that are desperately needed in the developing world. How effective would you predict Half the Sky will be in its effort to create new activists, donors, and volunteers for the international women’s movement (p. 237)?
13. Kristof and WuDunn make three specific recommendations for immediate action: “A $10 billion effort over five years to educate girls,” focusing on Africa but also encouraging Afghanistan and Pakistan to do better; a drive to iodize salt in poor countries, to improve I.Q. points lost to iodine deficiency in utero; and a twelve-year, $1.6 billion campaign to eradicate obstetric fistula and to reduce maternal mortality (pp. 246–47). What do you think about this vision? What has reading the book done to your sense of what needs to be done and what kinds of action might be most effective? Has reading the book inspired you to develop an action strategy or a personal plan to join the movement to address some of these issues? What kinds of actions personally do you think would be the most effective?
14. Jonathan Haidt has written in The Happiness Hypothesis that “a connection to something larger” can greatly affect our feelings of happiness. As Kristof and WuDunn suggest, “we are neurologically constructed so that we gain huge personal dividends from altruism” (p. 250). Do you feel this to be true? Do you feel, upon finishing this book, that you can have a direct impact on helping to turn women in impoverished parts of the world “into full-fledged human beings” (p. 251)?
I believe in book's main premise: by empowering women and girls, we can change the world and help end poverty. However, I found it disappointing and shocking to read this entire book and not find a single story about water and sanitation. You can't even find the word "water" in the index.
No doubt, the stories Nick and Sheryl tell are horrific and inspiring, and women living in poverty face obstacles that I can't even imagine. But, as I read it, I felt it was more of a collection of anecdotes from Nick and Sheryl's international travels rather than as advertised: a "must-read" and "call to arms" about how we can end global poverty.
Having spent 19 years working in international aid, I don't see how you can seriously talk about helping women in poverty and not mention water or sanitation. For millions of girls from poor households, there is a straight tradeoff between time spent in school and time spent collecting water. For their mothers, time spent collecting water means they have little time for more productive work or rest.
Being without access to water means that to obtain the water they need to survive, people resort to ditches, rivers and lakes polluted with human or animal excrement, and they carry that water home on their heads or backs, causing chronic back pains and sores, wearing flip flops if they are wearing shoes at all, walking uphill on steep, rocky or muddy paths. This daily walk for water saps their energy, diminishes their health status, and prevents them from participating in economic and social activities that are vital to the development of communities.
Each day,
* Women spend the equivalent of 340 million work days on water collection
* Poor families spend $137 million is spent on treatment of water-related diseases
* 5 million girls are collecting water instead of attending school
* 7,000 children worldwide die from the lack of safe water and a toilet
Poverty and water are inextricably linked.
What began as a hopeful read has unfortunately left me jaded and wondering if providing PVC piping and septic tanks just don't have the emotional appeal and book-selling potential of sex slavery and genital mutilation.
So I'm in! Let's invest in women. I believe it will pay off. But we have to be smart about it. I've met too many girls who dropped out of school at the age of 6 to help their mothers carry water, so it makes no sense to me to invest in education in a community with no toilets or accessible, safe water supplies. It makes no sense to me to build a health clinic of any kind in a community without toilets or water either, because 80% of the illnesses that will come into that clinic will be caused by the lack of water and toilets. I'm also a believer in micro-lending, but I've met a lot of people who have defaulted on their loans in order to pay medical bills for a family member suffering from diarrhea.
I'm excited that people are talking about women and development. But I'm disappointed at this missed opportunity to talk about the vital links between water and sanitation and poverty and empowerment. We need to act appropriately to ensure that the lack of attention to water and sanitation does not undermine all other development goals.
16 out of 20 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted January 9, 2010
The title of this book comes from an old Chinese proverb: women hold up half the sky. The Pulitzer Prize-winning authors lead us into the world of women in developing countries: breaking the silence about vaginal fistulas that ostracize thousands and thousands of girls; trafficking of girls and women; discussing the reality of wife-beatings as prevalent; and other contemporary issues facing women in a variety of cultures around the world. But they don't stop there, they then share the wonderful stories of hope and empowerment: through self-help projects; access to education; and micro-credit loans. One telling statement with its source in the US military, to paraphrase: where girls and women are educated, terrorism is not prevalent.
4 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Lynn20NJ
Posted November 11, 2009
An engaging, absorbing book with powerful recommendations. Not as depressing as one might imagine given the subject matter.
3 out of 5 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.RevJay
Posted November 16, 2009
Half the Sky is the most powerful book I have ever read. First person accounts of women suffering horrific abuse are unforgettable. While the reader is confronted with the stark realities that many women wordwide face, the authors also provide concrete tools and encouragement on how to make a real difference in the world. The authors invite us to join a revolution. I, for one, am reporting for duty!
2 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I was very interested in reading this book just from the reviews I read about it, but there was a little disappointment in it. The authors talk about gray areas in the problems they encountered and I encountered my own in reading this book. I have read both authors' previous work, but some of the recommendations in this book are realistic and some are hopeful. I don't believe foreign countries should not allow doctors to get degrees, just to make sure they don't emigrate. I doubt the authors would be saying this if a doctor in rural Iran was being persecuted and wanted to leave. Granted their work is very valuable to the country, but life decisions should be their own. You can't force people to work in certain conditions and expect them to be above human needs or to not become desensitized to things they see everyday. I do think the situation at the hospital with Dr. Pipi and the nurses was disturbing and disgusting, but like the authors I can understand that it is human circumstances and behaviors that contribute to these problems. I do agree that maybe training midwives and others to do the same duties a doctor would perform would be more practical. I doubt any real physician who cares for their patient would be threatened by their patient receiving accurate care before they are taken to a hospital, its better than having a woman lay in labor for days only for it to end in the death of both mother and child. Also, the idea that female travelers may have an easier time connecting with people is true, but I don't think the authors should gloss over real dangers female travelers face. Any female traveler to India is very familiar with Eve teasing and the rapes that go on there. Believe me when I say the local men are not intimidated by foreign women of any race. While there were some instances when I was reading where I just didn't agree with some of the authors' recommendations, I do think the wider message of this book should not be lost. It is a call to help volunteer at the many organizations talked about in the book. I am definitely interested in the fistula surgeries and hospitals dedicated to this cause. I even remember seeing a NOVA special on the hospital in Ethiopia and the care taken to give these women their dignity back and to overcome not only the physical, but emotional wounds inflected upon them by society. Cultural and societal attitudes must be changed in order for things to progress around the world and better the lives of women and girls. It was also great to see that there were grassroots efforts in combination with government agencies that came together to help better the lives of women and girls around the world. I do think there is more to be done and I will try to do my part.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted November 19, 2009
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This is an inspiring and eye opening book I am recommending to all my friends and one I am giving to many as a holiday gift, along with a donation in their name to one of the listed organizations which support women. The authors vividly let us realize the plight of many women and girls in developing countries and show us how little it takes to help them. I appreciated the mention of websites we can consult for more information about aid groups.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 1, 2012
Not fun to read but a must. Everyone should read this book. An eyeopener.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Meltivore
Posted December 9, 2011
Nick and Sheryl truly expose the tragedy that is gender discrimination. Through powerful and painful, yet uplifting, stories they paint a vivid picture of what it is to be a woman in societies where they are given little or no value.
With all the heart-wrenching tragedy they also show that progress is being made and hope is not futile.
This book truly has changed my perspective on what I consider a bad day and the first world problems I face, such as a long line at Starbucks. It has also propelled me into action and I am now committed to making a difference in women¿s lives.
Anonymous
Posted November 16, 2011
If you have an interest in social justice and improving the plight of the poor--this is a very good and practical book. Easy to read, down to earth, and practical.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Wanalee86
Posted September 5, 2011
I dived into this book so I could get it out of the way. It turns out I could not put it down and it made me want to make a difference. I am an education major now I am considering going abroad to teach.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted June 28, 2011
A good friend put this book in my hands. After reading it, I recommend this book to every person I can. No exaggeration. I read a lot and this book is top of my list. Very well written. Easy to read through, unlike some other nonfiction pieces. Incredibly eye opening. It describes difficult situations, but from the perspective of how women overcome their circumstances. It also gives educated insight into what we can do for this half of the world. Excellent book.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Nicholas D. Kristof is a favorite of mine, so it was a little difficult to not be biased.
Having said that, this book will shed lights in the depressing state of our current worldly affairs. Hats off to Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn for their bravery and great work!
3333832
Posted February 24, 2011
The authors have elequently establish irrefutable evidence that empowering women is the right thing to do, it is the smart thing to do and it is what makes sense to do, period !
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.beachhorizon
Posted January 7, 2011
A must read!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted November 11, 2010
This book is a must read for every woman. To me, it has become a call to every woman to play her part in helping better the lives of other women. I highly recommend this book. I'd also recommend that you buy "When God Stopped Keeping Score," an intimate look at the power of forgiveness that I believe every woman should read. Given the chance, it too could change your life.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.spillane
Posted September 23, 2010
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A chinese proverb states that woman hold up half the sky. This statement is the backbone of the book Half the Sky by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn, which focuses on empowering women and girls. This book- a collection of essays and anecdotes- argues that empowering woman could be the greatest resource that third world countries have to bring them out of poverty. For most in America it is thought that slavery ended with the thirteenth amendment, but little is it known that woman and girls are still being slaved all over the world. At young ages they are trafficked into brothels, raped by men when they are old enough, and then forced into prostitution. They are the victims of gender violence, which includes honor killings and mass rape, and every minute a woman dies from maternal mortality. One of the major messages in this book is that education is the best way to change what is happening to females around the world. In education females receive knowledge and with that knowledge they can change what is happening around them. It is said that educating a female is educating a village, and one village at a time we can slowly change this epidemic. I like that this book can and has already made a difference to woman and girls all over the world. By writing this book they introduced a subject that people seldom talk about, and gave it the attention it needs to promote change. Not only do they introduce it to you, they give you plenty of organizations to go through so you to can make a change. This book shows you that miracles can happen and that even you can help make a difference to what is happening around the world. A down side of this book is gradually there are less and less anecdotes. I think the anecdotes are what makes this book more valuable. The stories hit you on a personal level and make you think, what if that was me? Every girl that has the chance should read this book. It opens the door to a whole new world that many people don't even know exists. Some of the stories will leave you shocked and disturbed, even horrified, but reading them makes you want to make a change even more.The real question is will gender equality ever truly exist?
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.decoartist712
Posted May 17, 2010
This book should be required reading for all Americans, men and women. While it is hard to read at times, the message is ultimately inspirational. Reading this book may just permenantly cure you of "can't". Read it in your book club and then select one of the very worthy organizations listed in at the end of the book and get involved.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.BillPilgrim
Posted May 14, 2010
The authors want people living in the United States and the rest of the Western world to take positive steps to improve the circumstances of women throughout the world. They focus on several of the terrible problems faced by women in the developing world - sexual slavery, forced prostitution, honor killings, rape as an instrument of war and intimidation, death and trauma due to pregnancy and childbirth, genital cutting, etc.
The format of the book is primarily to tell the stories of individual women whom the authors have met and interviewed. Although there also are statistics about the breadth of the problems, individual stories are used to better raise the empathy of the readers. This technique is used because studies have found that "statistics have a dulling effect, while it is individual stories that move people to act."
Each chapter tells one or a few individual stories of women who suffered the same indignities, and then is followed by another story of someone who is working to address that particular problem. At the end of the book there is a long listing of aid organizations and their web sites, which can be contacted to offer monetary contributions and other support. People are urged to not just give money and raise awareness at home, but to also visit the areas where these problems exist, because "to tackle an issue effectively, you need to understand it - and it's impossible to understand an issue by simply reading about it."
While large international aid organizations are recognized as being important, they have flaws and the authors primarily highlight and promote the efforts of small social entrepreneurs. These are people who "create their own context by starting a new organization, company or movement to address a social problem in a creative way." They can establish small organizations that have significant impacts in the areas where they operate.
In the chapter where the authors argue that China's economic improvement (and that in some other nations) was brought about because of the advancement of women in the society, it is briefly mentioned that "Sweatshops have given a women a boost." the authors recognize that this will be "shocking to many Americans." I would have thought that this issue should deserve more discussion. It is noted that women in East Asian countries are moving from farms to factories, and that family farms are less productive. Is the end result going to be factory faming? There is also no discussion at all about fair trade. I am interested in what the authors have to say about the impact that Western consumers can have on the Asian economies if they seek to buy only products that are produced using fair trade guidelines.
A point made at the end of the book supports the thesis made in "A Paradise Made in Hell", by Rebecca Solnit. Research findings show that one's level of happiness is not effected much by either good or bad fortune. Any effect on an individual's happiness caused by winning the lottery or suffering a debilitating injury is temporary. But, a real change in the level of happiness people feel comes from "a connection to something larger - a greater cause or a humanitarian purpose. *** We are neurologically constructed so that we gain huge personal dividends from altruism." So, getting involved in trying to improve the lives of others will automatically improve the enjoyment that you get out of life. The book presents ways for people to get easily and quickly involved. Do it today.
APassionforWriting
Posted May 11, 2010
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Half the Sky is a game-changer! Living in the U.S. we have been given so many freedoms that were established through struggles many years ago. It is an eye-opening and humbling experience to read a book that speaks to the social injustices and the atrocities of women and girls in our world today.
Kristof and WuDunn gives the reader a real and raw view of the struggles and fights of women and girls around the globe seeking equality in education, careers and just being recognized as human. This is a must read for everyone! After you read Half the Sky, I challenge every reader to pay it forward and reach back to help someone else.
Qablooie
Posted April 11, 2010
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I had not previously been exposed to the magnitude of the many problems women face. This was recommended to me by my college age daughter which I am thankful for since I generally do not pick non-fiction for a relaxing read. While I can see how it could be preachy for some, I found it to be a roller coaster of heartbreak and inspiration. I was very pleasantly surprised that I felt compelled to keep reading until I was finished.
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Overview
From two of our most fiercely moral voices, a passionate call to arms against our era’s most pervasive human rights violation: the oppression of women and girls in the developing world.With Pulitzer Prize winners Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn as our guides, we undertake an odyssey through Africa and Asia to meet the extraordinary women struggling there, among them a Cambodian teenager sold into sex slavery and an Ethiopian woman who suffered devastating injuries in childbirth. Drawing on the breadth of their combined reporting experience, Kristof and WuDunn depict our world ...