After a century that saw two world wars, the Nazi Holocaust, Josef Stalin’s Gulag, the killing fields of Cambodia and more recent atrocities in Rwanda and now Darfur, the belief that we are progressing morally has become difficult to defend. Yet there is more to the question than extreme cases of moral breakdown.
This year marks the 60th anniversary of the UN General Assembly’s adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In response to the crimes committed during World War II, the Declaration sought to establish the principle that everyone is entitled to the same basic rights, irrespective of race, color, sex, language, religion or other status. So, perhaps we can judge moral progress by asking how well we have done in combating racism and sexism.
Assessing the extent to which racism and sexism have actually been reduced is a daunting task. Nevertheless, recent polls by WorldPublicOpinion.org shed some indirect light on this question.
The polls, involving nearly 15,000 respondents, were conducted in 16 countries, representing 58 percent of the world’s population: Azerbaijan, China, Egypt, France, Great Britain, India, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, the Palestinian Territories, Russia, South Korea, Turkey, Ukraine and the US. In 11 of these countries, most people believe that, over their lifetimes, people of different races and ethnicities have come to be treated more equally.
On average, 59 percent say this, with only 19 percent thinking that people are treated less equally and 20 percent saying that there has been no change. People in the US, Indonesia, China, Iran and Great Britain are particularly likely to perceive greater equality. Palestinians are the only people of whom a majority sees less equality for people of different racial or ethnic groups, although opinion is relatively evenly divided in Nigeria, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Russia.
An even stronger overall majority, 71 percent, regards women as having made progress toward equality, although once again the Palestinian territories are an exception, this time joined by Nigeria. Russia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan again have significant minorities saying that women are now treated less equally than they once were. In India, although only 53 percent say that women have gained greater equality, an additional 14 percent say that women now have more rights than men! (Presumably they were thinking only of those females who are not aborted because prenatal testing has shown them not to be male.)
Overall, it seems likely that these opinions reflect real changes, and thus are signs of moral progress toward a world in which people are not denied rights on the basis of race, ethnicity or sex.
That view is backed up by the polls’ most striking results: very widespread rejection of inequality based on race, ethnicity or sex. On average, 90 percent of those asked said that equal treatment for people of different races or ethnic origins is important, and in no country were more than 13 percent of respondents prepared to say that equal treatment is not important.
When asked about equal rights for women, support was almost as strong, with an average of 86 percent rating it important. Significantly, these majorities existed in Muslim countries as well. In Egypt, for example, 97 percent said that racial and ethnic equality is important, and 90 percent said that equality for women is important. In Iran, the figures were 82 percent and 78 percent respectively.
Compared with just a decade before the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, this represents a significant change in people’s views. Equal rights for women — not simply suffrage, but also working outside the home or living independently — was still a radical idea in many countries. Openly racist ideas prevailed in Germany and the American South, and much of the world’s population lived in colonies ruled by European powers. Today, despite what happened in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia — and what appeared to be on the verge of happening after the recent disputed election in Kenya — no country openly accepts racist doctrines.
Unfortunately, the same cannot be said about equal rights for women. In Saudi Arabia, women are not even permitted to drive a car, let alone vote. In many other countries, too, whatever people may say about gender equality, the reality is that women are far from having equal rights.
This may mean that the surveys I have quoted indicate not widespread equality, but widespread hypocrisy. Nevertheless, hypocrisy is the tribute that vice pays to virtue, and the fact that racists and sexists must pay this tribute is an indication of some moral progress.
Words do have consequences, and what one generation says but does not really believe, the next generation may believe and even act upon. Public acceptance of ideas is itself progress of a kind, but what really matters is that it provides leverage that can be used to bring about more concrete progress. For that reason, we should greet the poll results positively and resolve to close the gaps that still exist between rhetoric and reality.
Peter Singer is professor of bioethics at Princeton University and laureate professor at the University of Melbourne.
Copyright: Project Syndicate
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