1:30pm

Power Shift

with Sally Armstrong

Hosted by CBC's Judy Trinh

Saturday
Oct , 2019
26
Power Shift
Sally Armstrong

Striding into Taliban-held Afghanistan with a chador over her six-foot frame, playing high-fives with a traumatized child-rape survivor in the Congolese jungle, marching with the defiant grandmothers in Swaziland, she explores the darkest reaches of women’s experience and brings back astonishing news of hope, challenge and change. From Tahrir Square to L.A., Armstrong discovers that the sisters are doing it for themselves—and revolutionizing the world.

Michele Landsberg
In Power Shift: The Longest Revolution, her 2019 CBC Massey Lectures, award-winning author, journalist, and human rights activist Sally Armstrong illustrates how the status of the female half of humanity is crucial to our collective surviving and thriving. 
 
Drawing on anthropology, social science, literature, politics, and economics, she examines the many beginnings of the role of women in society, and the evolutionary revisions over millennia in the realms of sex, religion, custom, culture, politics, and economics. What ultimately comes to light is that gender inequality comes at too high a cost to us all.
 
The facts are indisputable. When women get even a bit of education, the whole of society improves. When they get a bit of healthcare, everyone lives longer. In many ways, it has never been a better time to be a woman: a fundamental shift has been occurring. Yet from Toronto to Timbuktu, the promise of equality still eludes half the world’s population.
 
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