Not in the same ways. In fact, women are taught to see each other as competition, not as allies, whereas men are taught to curate their lives for the approval of other men. The following quote is about America but it applies to other patriarchal cultures as well. In case you haven't clued in to this yet, a patriarchy is a male-centric social system. Up until 50 years ago in the US, there were 300 something laws that applied to women that did not apply to men. I'm guess it was pretty similar in the UK.
A ton of men today still don't really view women as people because so much of our culture envisions men as core citizens, and women (51% of the population) as other, and side-kicks or helpmeets. I read something today where a guy said he didn't truly view his wife as a person (in the same way that men are) until he witnessed her giving birth to his daughter. This is a pervasive (although often subconscious) belief because until really recently, this was a mainstream message - men are the center of society and women only exist to please, entertain, nurture, and make their lives better. I’m a bit baffled that you still don’t seem to understand this stuff.
“As the sociologist Michael Kimmel notes in his indispensable cultural history Manhood in America, men care a great deal about what other men think of them. In fact, he says, “In large part, it’s other men who are important to American men; [they] define their masculinity, not as much in relation to women, but in relation to one another. Masculinity is largely a homosocial enactment.”
— The Macho Paradox: Why Some Men Hurt Women and How All Men Can Help (How to End Domestic Violence, Mental and Emotional Abuse, and Sexual Harassment) by Jackson Katz