Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement

What Women Think: A Look at What Young Women Want from the Obama Administration

Posted by Jill Tubman, Jack & Jill Politics at 10:59 AM on December 18, 2008.


Gen Y gets it and wants an active administration including a First Lady who's a real leader to create change we can see in our everyday lives.

Share and save this post:

      

      

Share on Facebook       

AlterNet Social Networks:
follow us on twitter
find us on Facebook

Got a tip for a post?:
Email us | Anonymous form

Get Reproductive Justice and Gender in your
mailbox!

 

Check out the video above from the YWCA's OWN IT initiative. For some reason, you don't often hear about what young women think and what younger women want. We especially don't hear enough about what black women really think and want. The YWCA recently did a survey and had some interesting findings that provide some insight, I think, into the future of America. Short version: Gen Y gets it and wants an active administration including a First Lady who's a real leader to create change we can see in our everyday lives -- Including on the subjects of fair pay and racial justice. Obama Transition Team: listen up. Here's some selected deets:

• Three-quarters (77%) of young women (aged 18-29) say that "civil rights and racial justice" should be a top priority for the new administration to address in the first year, compared with half (54%) of older women (aged 30-70).

• Young women are more likely than older women to say that discrimination against Blacks (42% vs. 24%) and Hispanics (28% vs. 18%) is a "very serious" problem in the U.S. today.

• Despite progress, Generation Y women say that discrimination will be a major obstacle to the progress of women like them over the next ten years.  Half (50%) of Generation Y women say that racism or discrimination based on ethnicity or religion will be major obstacles to the progress of women like them over the next ten years, compared with three in 10 older women (aged 30-70).

• Generation Y women (aged 18-29) are likely to be more demanding of the new administration than older women.  Significantly more young women say that the new administration must make several domestic issues "top priority" in the first year than older women, including healthcare reform (87% v. 76%), quality and cost of education (85% v. 76%), the housing crisis (83% v. 69%) and HIV/AIDS (66% v.45%).

• Women say that lack of jobs and other economic uncertainties are potentially the greatest barriers to progress for women over the next ten years. Women say the top barriers to progress for women like them are:
o Lack of retirement savings (70%)
o Major illness or medical expense (68%)
o Lack of jobs or layoffs due to jobs sent overseas (63%)
o Cost of college (60%)
o Lack of affordable and accessible childcare, tied with unequal pay (59%)

• Black women are more likely than White women to see major obstacles to the progress of women like them over the next decade from all issues provided, except credit card debt, in which Black and White women share similar concerns. The top of the list includes: major illness or medical expense (84% v. 68%), unequal pay (81% v. 55%), lack of retirement savings (78% v. 69%), lack of jobs and layoffs due to jobs sent overseas (76% v. 60%) and cost of college/higher education (74% v. 58%).

• Race influences perceptions of sexism. By a two-to-one margin, more Black women than White women say discrimination against women is a very serious problem (45% to 19%).

• Most American women (57%) want the next First Lady to take a visible leadership role and champion issues that are important to her. Older women, aged 63 to 70, would prefer that she stays behind the scenes.

Digg!

Tagged as: choice, women, women, obama, women's rights, generation y, michelle obama, young women


Is Taxing Plastic Surgery Sexist?
Part of the funding for the Senate's health care bill will come from a 5 percent tax on cosmetic surgery, on procedures overwhelmingly obtained by women.
Post by Jill Filipovic. November 23, 2009.
Utah Lawmaker: I Don't Mind "the Gays," but "I Don’t Want ‘Em Stuffing it Down My Throat all the Time"
"Certainly not in my kid's face."
Post by Zaid Jilani. November 20, 2009.
Hmmm ... Why Do So Many Wingnuts Have Such an Obsessive Fear of Being Raped?
It's all they can talk about in the right-wing media.
Post by Staff. November 20, 2009.
Advertisement
You've chosen to turn comments off for the entire site. Would you like to turn them back on?