Between Normative Progress and Lived Inequality: Rethinking Gender Equality and the Effectiveness of Women’s Rights Protection in Contemporary Legal Orders
Abstract
Despite significant normative advancements in international human rights law, gender inequality remains deeply embedded in both social structures and legal systems across contemporary legal orders. Over the past several decades, international and regional frameworks—such as the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and related regional human rights instruments—have established comprehensive legal standards aimed at securing gender equality and eliminating discrimination against women. These developments reflect an important normative shift from formal equality toward substantive equality, requiring states not only to guarantee equal treatment in law but also to address the structural conditions that produce and sustain inequality in practice. This paper examines the persistent tension between formal legal progress in women’s rights protection and the continued reality of lived inequality. While women’s rights are now widely recognized within domestic constitutions and international legal regimes, their practical implementation often remains inconsistent, fragmented, or ineffective. As a result, a significant gap persists between the normative promises of international human rights law and the everyday experiences of women, particularly those belonging to marginalized, economically disadvantaged, or socially excluded groups. The paper argues that although international and regional legal frameworks have developed robust and increasingly sophisticated standards for gender equality, their overall effectiveness is significantly undermined by three interrelated factors. First, structural discrimination embedded within legal, political, and economic institutions continues to reproduce unequal outcomes despite formal equality guarantees. Second, weak enforcement mechanisms at both domestic and international levels limit the capacity of legal norms to produce tangible change, particularly where judicial independence, institutional capacity, or political will is lacking. Third, socio-cultural barriers—including patriarchal norms, gender stereotypes, and discriminatory social practices—restrict women’s ability to access justice and fully exercise their rights. Drawing on international human rights instruments, jurisprudence, and interdisciplinary scholarly literature, the paper critically analyses the gap between law and lived reality and evaluates the extent to which existing legal frameworks effectively protect women’s rights in practice. It highlights how legal protections, while normatively strong, often fail to translate into substantive equality due to institutional and societal constraints that operate beyond formal legal rules.
The paper concludes that achieving meaningful and sustainable gender equality requires more than the formal recognition of rights within legal texts. It demands comprehensive institutional transformation, including strengthened enforcement mechanisms, improved access to justice, and gender-sensitive interpretation of legal norms. In addition, it requires broader socio-cultural change aimed at challenging and transforming the structural and normative foundations of gender inequality. Only through the combined effect of legal reform, institutional strengthening, and cultural transformation can the promise of substantive equality under international human rights law be fully realized.
© 2026 Elizabeta Imeraj, Flutur Shabani, published by International Institute for Private, Commercial and Competition Law
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