IDEOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE SOVIET GOVERNMENT'S STATE POLICY TOWARDS WOMEN
Abstract
This article comprehensively analyzes the structure, tasks, areas of activity of women’s organizations in Uzbekistan during the Soviet era, and their impact on society. The article examines the role of organizations in social transformation in relation to the traditional values of the Uzbek people. During the Soviet era, women’s organizations were important social institutions established to actively involve women in political, economic, and cultural life. Their main goal was to ensure women’s education, increase their literacy rate, ensure their employment, and encourage them to actively participate in building a new society within the framework of Soviet ideology. These organizations tried to reconcile the traditional family role of women with the new social requirements of the Soviet era and performed many social tasks in the creation of the "new Soviet woman." In general, although women’s organizations promoted Soviet ideology, they played an important role in improving the social activity and legal status of women in society. That is, although the essence and purpose of these organizations were based on Soviet ideology, they served to ensure social progress and equality between men and women.