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Feminisms in Development: Contradictions, Contestations and Challenges [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 262 pages, height x width: 216x135 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Dec-2006
  • Izdevniecība: Zed Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1842778196
  • ISBN-13: 9781842778197
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 262 pages, height x width: 216x135 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 31-Dec-2006
  • Izdevniecība: Zed Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1842778196
  • ISBN-13: 9781842778197
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The political project of reasserting feminist engagement with development has proceeded uneasily in recent years. This book examines how the arguments of feminist researchers have often become depoliticised by development institutions and offers richly contextualised accounts of the pitfalls and compromises of the politics of engagement. Speaking from within academic institutions, social movements, development bureaucracies and national and international NGOs, the contributors highlight on-going battles for interpretation and the unequal power relations within which these battles take place. They engage with the challenges of achieving solidarity in the context of increasingly polarised geo-political relations, and advance a diversity of critiques of simplified ideas about gender, and how these ideas come to be interpreted in institutional policies and practices. The political project of reasserting feminist engagement with development has proceeded uneasily in recent years. This book examines how the arguments of feminist researchers have often become depoliticised by development institutions and offers richly contextualised accounts of the pitfalls and compromises of the politics of engagement. Speaking from within academic institutions, social movements, development bureaucracies and national and international NGOs, the contributors highlight on-going battles for interpretation and the unequal power relations within which these battles take place. They engage with the challenges of achieving solidarity in the context of increasingly polarised geo-political relations, and advance a diversity of critiques of simplified ideas about gender, and how these ideas come to be interpreted in institutional policies and practices.

Recenzijas

'It is honest, level-headed, yet deeply committed to core feminist values and principles. Its editors and authors must be commended for their courage and their persistence with the difficult questions.' Gita Sen

'A lively and self-critical set of essays on the perils and potentials of feminist engagements with the structures of power in the development field, by those who have been there.' Naila Kabeer

'Using an international perspective, it provides indispensable insights for everyone working on development, activists and women's movements around the world.' Pinar Ilkkaracan

'Highly recommended to researchers, teachers, and activists in all fields of development study and practice.' Population and Development Review

'Their work is significant for GAD (Gender and Development) practitioners and should be a mandatory read.' Wendy Miller, Lilith

'The book is exemplar in the field of feminist writing ... pioneering in its insights on the trajectory of gender and development debates and policy choices that have resulted from feminist engagement. The conceptual breadth of this work is impressive as it seamlessly covers multiple topics that are central to gender and development debates ... A compelling read.' Feminist Economics

Papildus informācija

This book explores the contested relationship between feminisms and development. It reflects on the uneasy gains made by feminist efforts to bring 'gender' into development, and on the challenges for reasserting feminist engagement with development as a political project.
Acknowledgements viii
1 Introduction: feminisms in development: contradictions, contestations and challenges 1
ANDREA CORNWALL, ELIZABETH HARRISON AND ANN WHITEHEAD
Part one: The struggle over interpretation
2 Gender myths that instrumentalize women: a view from the Indian front line
21
SRILATHA BATLIWALA AND DEEPA DHANRAJ
3 Dangerous equations? How female-headed households became the poorest of the poor: causes, consequences and cautions
35
SYLVIA CHANT
4 Back to women? Translations, resignifications and myths of gender in policy and practice in Brazil
48
CECILIA M.B. SARDENBERG
5 Battles over booklets: gender myths in the British aid programme
65
ROSALIND EYBEN
6 Not very poor, powerless or pregnant: the African woman forgotten by development
79
EVERJOICE J. WIN
7 'Streetwalkers show the way': reframing the debate on trafficking from sex workers' perspective
86
NANDINEE BANDYOPADHYAY WITH SWAPNA GAYEN, RAMA DEBNATH, KAJOL BOSE, SIKHA DAS, GEETA DAS, M. DAS, MANJU BISWAS, PUSHPA SARKAR, PUTUL SINGH, RASHOBA BIBI, REKHA MITRA AND SUDIPTA BISWAS
Part two: Institutionalizing gender in development
8 Gender, myth and fable: the perils of mainstreaming in sector bureaucracies
101
HILARY STANDING
9 Making sense of gender in shifting institutional contexts: some reflections on gender mainstreaming
112
RAMYA SUBRAHMANIAN
10 Gender mainstreaming: what is it (about) and should we continue doing it?
122
PRUDENCE WOODFORD-BERGER
11 Mainstreaming gender or 'streaming' gender away: feminists marooned in the development business
135
MAITRAYEE MUKHOPADHYAY
12 Critical connections: feminist studies in African contexts
150
AMINA MAMA
13 SWApping gender: from cross-cutting obscurity to sectoral security?
161
ANNE-MARIE GOETZ AND JOANNE SANDLER
Part three: Looking to the future: challenges for feminist engagement
14 The NGO-ization of Arab women's movements
177
ISLAH JAD
15 Political fiction meets gender myth: post-conflict reconstruction, 'democratization' and women's rights
191
DENIZ KANDIYOTI
16 Reassessing paid work and women's empowerment: lessons from the global economy
201
RUTH PEARSON
17 Announcing a new dawn prematurely? Human rights feminists and the rights-based approaches to development
214
DZODZI TSIKATA
18 The chimera of success: gender ennui and the changed international policy environment
227
MAXINE MOLYNEUX
Notes on contributors 241
Index 247
Andrea Cornwall is Fellow of the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex. She is co-editor of Dislocating Masculinity: Comparative Ethnographies (1994), Realizing Rights: Transforming Sexual and Reproductive Wellbeing (Zed 2002) and editor of Readings in Gender in Africa (2004).

Ann Whitehead is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Sussex. A contributor to foundational debates on feminist engagement with development and on theorising gender, she has had a wide engagement with national and international feminist politics.

Elizabeth Harrison is a Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Sussex. She is the co-author of Whose Development? An Ethnography of Aid (Zed 1998).