Value women's working hours in employment contracts: Sr Allesandra

Restructuring the working week to include hours spent on caring for family members or in community volunteering is one way societies could better recognise the dignity of women, a Vatican representative told a Sydney gathering for International Women’s Day, reports The Catholic Weekly.

Salesian Sister Alessandra Smerilli, Secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, said societies will truly flourish when caring roles, maternity and the equal dignity of women cease to be undervalued.

Salesian Sister Alessandra Smerilli, Secretary of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development. PHOTO: File photo/Vatican Media.

Sr Smerilli shared her thoughts on the need for continued advancement in education, economic policies and legal protections for women via a pre-recorded message at an evening hosted by Australian Catholic University and Mary MacKillop Place on March 8.

The senior Vatican leader commended a concept promoted by Canadian legal philosopher and author Jennifer Nedelsky whereby employment contracts would accommodate 30 traditional working hours and no less than 22 caring hours per average week.

“Care is usually considered as a distraction from more important jobs, outsourced, usually to women or people who do it on behalf of others and live off this, often miserably,” Sr Smerilli said.

“The very fact that remunerations to those who carry out these jobs for a living are lower than the average suggests that care does not have a high social consideration.

“We need to bring back care to the public scene.”

Past and current students of the Women’s Leadership for Mission program at the International Women’s Day event held at ACU North Sydney campus on 8 March. Photo: Catholic Weekly/Supplied by ACU

The 30-22 hour split would be averaged across a year and written into contracts in the same way as annual leave rights, she suggested.

“Only if we can socially and legally value care, will we be able to ensure that it becomes an essential dimension of every job.

“Only by valuing care on a social and civic level will we ensure that it is not understood as a ‘women’s’ issue.”

The event was attended by education and religious leaders, students, and representatives of the Sisters of St Joseph and their ministries and opened with a welcome from congregational leader Sr Monica Cavanagh RSJ.

The event coincided with the launch of the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference Australian Young Catholic Women’s Fellowship, through which eight women are being sponsored to undertake the Women’s Leadership for Mission graduate certificate program offered by ACU.

This is a slightly abridged form of an article by Marilyn Rodrigues, published in The Catholic Weekly.