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This article presents a review of the experiences of inequality and discrimination that most women in Pakistan face in accessing important societal resources such as education, paid work and politics in the country. The article is broadly based on Sylvia Walby (1990) concept of ‘Public Patriarchy’ in which she traces the transformation of male dominance from the private sphere of household to the publish sphere of society and state institutions. The paper demonstrates that the various ways in which local traditions and norms of seclusion and segregation, family system and cultural ideals of femininity restrict women’s access to acquire education, get paid employment, and take part in politics in the country. The article argues that sexist cultural ideals coupled with the patriarchal laws and policies of the Pakistani state put women in a disadvantageous situation which amounts to systematic and structural discrimination of women in the country.

Noor Sanauddin, Jamil Ahmad Chitrali, Syed Owais. (2016) Public Patriarchy: An Analysis of Women’s Access to Education, Work and Politics in Pakistan, Putaj Humanities And Social Science, Volume-23, Issue-1.
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