INTRODUCTION
Women have suffered a wide range of discriminatory practices and abuses that have given rise to the global concern about the gross inequality and inequity existing between the genders. Gender inequality is indeed a global phenomenon, and the need to address this inequality has become urgent and compelling. Women all over the world have been deprived in one way or another of their rights to education, reproductive health, property, employment, economic opportunities, and most importantly, their rights to participate in the making of laws that directly affect them. These inequalities have subjected women to the whims of the male gender and have resulted in a huge disparity between the genders with respect to illiteracy and poverty. It has been reported that an estimated 60 to 80 percent of teenage girls in Liberia sell their bodies to fund their educations. Women's impoverishment and lack of education, in turn, contribute to their lower status in terms of health, property and economic development, employment, and politics. Thus, a circle is formed in which inequality breeds more inequality.
Gender inequality is not, however, limited to inequalities between the male and female genders. Intra-gender inequalities are also very significant issues that exacerbate the inequality of women by leaving some women in a particularly disadvantaged position. Laws sometimes draw distinctions between different groups of women, as was evident in the Liberian laws that classified and categorized women in Liberia into two groups, “civilized,” referring to urban and/or statutorily married women, and “native,” referring to rural and/or customarily married women.