The questions in the online poll were based on a survey by University of Michigan.
Earlier this month, University of Michigan's Population Studies Center had published the results of a survey in which it had asked respondents from seven Muslim countries to identify an 'appropriate' dress for women to wear publicly.
Respondents were shown six head shots which showed women wearing a shuttlecock burka, a niqab, different forms of headscarves and one without any head covering.
The report revealed that 32% of Pakistanis believe the niqab is the most appropriate dress for women.
Also, only 22% of Pakistanis in the original survey voted that women should dress as they wish.
The Express Tribune ran some of the questions from University of Michigan's report in an online poll and, over a period of five days, 2235 people responded.
Of these, 1692 (76%) of respondents were male. 74% were from Pakistan, 18% were Pakistani expatriates and 8% identified as 'other'.
In comparison, University of Michigan's survey polled 3,523 Pakistanis of whom 51% were male.
Survey results
Please note these polls are non-scientific, reflect only the online audience and can be manipulated.
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In the online survey, the most popular option was Woman 6 with 39% of votes.
In the original survey, Woman 2 who is shown wearing the niqab was deemed the most appropriately dressed with 32% of votes. Only 2% of the Pakistani respondents had voted for Woman 6 who is shown without any veil or head-covering.
According to University of Michigan's report, in which respondents from Iraq, Saudia Arabia, Egypt Tunisia, Lebanon and Turkey were also polled, only the Lebanese respondents voted in the majority for Woman 6.
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University of Michigan also had asked respondents if it should be up to women to dress as they wish. In their report, only 22% agreed with the statement (4% of Pakistanis strongly agreed with the statement and 18% agreed).
In Tribune's online survey, 48% strongly agreed that women should dress as they wish and 13% agreed, with a total of 61% being in favour of the statement.
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In the original survey, 8% of Pakistanis disagreed with the statement that women should always obey their husbands. In Tribune's version of the survey, 43% disagreed with it.
COMMENTS (61)
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"61% of Pakistanis say women should dress as they wish: online survey"
It should have said 61% of the educated, computer literate and richer Pakistanis say women should dress as they wish.
The important corollary hidden in this is the fact that 39% of these same class of Pakistanis support conservative Islamic dress. This is not good news. We all know that over 80% of Pakistanis on a broader cross-section of the population want strict Sharia and burka.
The way ET twists and manipulate news, i highly doubt the figures of this survey.
How many Pakistani men would like same dressing for their wives, sisters and other women?
@Dajjal: where, exactly, was this stated? Are you saying that If women are given the right to dress as they wish they'll probably walk around wearing nothing?
Surveys by newspapers generally are not representative so they are not of much use. My objection to the one conducted by Michigan University as well as this one is that both of them did not mention chaddar and dopatta which is the most used headscarf in Pakistan and part of ladies attire in this region. The results of both surveys are incredible. The Michigan University survey said 87% Pakistanis support burga, hijab or niqab which despite the increasing Arabization of society does not seem to be correct when you go out and see common women folks in public. According to this one by the Express Tribune half of Pakistanis support women choice in dress which again does not seem to be correct. For example how many will support if a women of their families want to go out in bikini. Your guess as good as mine but will not be in whole number.
@Imran: Burger people
hahahaha
way to go for categorizing people
lol if you do survey through users of "Tribune website" so for sure you will get these results. In research it is called 'Sampling error' :)
The real takeaway from this article is that 39% of ET's readers think men should decide what women get to wear. Given ET's English-speaking, affluent, urban Pakistani / expatriate readership, this is a shocking statistic.
There is no comparison between the Michigan survey which used proper sampling based on demographic groups, gender etc and an 'online survey' on the website of ET. So comparing the results of these two are like comparing apples and oranges.
First of all I would just like to say that I think the survey isn't about whether this should be implemented by the government or not. It is just people's opinion.
Secondly, how does agreeing with women not wearing any head covering implies that you think women can "wear whatever they want"? I don't think most people would be agreeing with "anything", rather only with the lack of head covering. I am sure the survey did not include whether women should be nude or clothed, so how can we say "wear anything".
Yes it is true only well educated people visit ET but they are not all liberal and besides that if you only go to your nearest market you wont see that many niqabs, women are in dupatas(most of them dont even cover their heads unless its prayer time). i live in suburbs of Lahore (not defence) and i came back from my local market and didn't spot a niqab there and its not only here i have been to cities and villages of Northern and Southern Punjab generally 3-4 out of 10 women wear niqab. Can't say much about other provinces if their residents can give a better feedback on that and then we can analyse the real situation of our country.
@Dani(fake) hey you stole my nick. I have been commenting on ET for a long time using that nick so go get a new one. All rights reserved for that one.
What an idiotic exercise! What are you trying to prove? General population is backward but the online wizards belong to the modern world?
@Surprised: so?? Do you have to stereotype?
What world are we living in!. What clothes people are or aren't wearing should not even be an issue of discussion. They rest of the world is making enormous strides in science and technology. When are people going to get off their backsides in this country, get out of this dark age and make some contribution to science and other fields of human endeavor.
@Arsalan: Looks like you shared a family story and personal experience. I dont know how is it related to our society?
@Dani: And you will compel others to follow your beliefs? Where is the virtue in following instructions under compulsion? Where is the virtue in compelling others to follow the instructions of the one who instructs that there is no compulsion in faith?
Love the disclaimer by ET :)
"Survey results
Please note these polls are non-scientific, reflect only the online audience and can be manipulated."
How can ET claims it represents Pakistanis when anyone outside Pakistan from any country can click and vote. Come on ET have some journalistic integrity and publish my comment :)
Online poll survey if conducted scientifically can lead to good results in countries where internet penetration is high. Unfortunately in Pakistan's case the bias will be really high as only the middle class and upper class has internet access. I would suggest the Express Tribune should fund a proper scientific poll, maybe a cellphone based one with appropriate sample from all over Pakistan and then publish a proper rebuttal to University of Michigan survey or endorse its results. This kind of ad hoc polls will tarnish the reputation of the paper only.
The real survey link is below, which survey did express conduct?
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/01/08/what-is-appropriate-attire-for-women-in-muslim-countries/
"Online" Survey - a huge bias! Results not a true depiction of the society's thinking
As a statistician I feel its scientifically inaccurate to label online polls as surveys and make hypothesis such as 'x% Pakistani's say' something. There is clearly no background study done like for the UoM survey (if you read through the design of that study) nor any measures for the adjustment of bias and errors. This is a poll and no statement can be deduced from the results that has statistical evidence to back it up. This is misleading and I feel there was no need to publish this as a counter-statistic to the UoM study, from Tribune at the least.
Only 61% of ET readers are sane.
Online People don't represent all the strata of society. If everyone (male & female) is allowed to wear (or eat or drink) what she/he wish,then where is the role of Islam?
It is nothing but ridiculous.