Global Empowerment of Women: Responses to Globalization and Politicized ReligionsCarolyn M. Elliott Routledge, 2007 M12 12 - 416 pages The empowerment of women is a broadly endorsed strategy for solving a host of difficult problems, from child poverty to gender violence to international development. The seventeen international scholars in this multi-disciplinary volume offer thoughtful critiques of the notion of empowerment based on their studies in twenty countries in all regions of the world. The comparative introduction places concepts of empowerment in the context of models of the market and of community, showing how contradictions in these models as they are enacted on the ground provide both spaces and constraints for women. The chapters consider opportunities for women in the context of globalization, resurgent nationalism and politicized religion, cultures of masculinity, and the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Africa. They show how initiatives at national or global levels are transformed by local cultures and power structures, and demonstrate the fruitfulness of tensions between universal values of human rights and contextualized understandings. This landmark, multi-disciplinary collection of original studies by distinguished international feminist scholars will be an essential addition to the fields of Political Science, Women’s Studies, Economics, Sociology, International Development, and Environmental Studies. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 57
... women , even as women are achieving a degree of equality with men in some settings . Structural adjustment , privatization of state functions , and the expansion of market economies contribute to widening the gap between Preface.
... equality made in such agreements as the Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the Declaration of the United Nations' Conference on Human Rights, the Beijing Platform for Action, the World Summit on ...
... equality among members in a political community that guarantees political and civil rights against intrusion by the state. In economic terms, this translates into a preference that the market allocate most resources, that individuals ...
... equality and inclusion, it can be called to account for unfairness to women, with increasing success in many societies and in international norms.8 Given the problems that markets can generate—individualism, exclusion, and inequality ...
... equality, gender justice, and women's rights, and identifying themselves as human rights activists, Women Living Under Muslim Laws works within the communitarian model of religious-based society.17 But institutional support for equality ...
Contents
Reproductive Technologies | |
Opportunities and Contradictions | |
Women in Saudi Arabia | |
Negotiating with Multiple Patriarchies | |
The Case of | |
Commissions | |
Rape Trauma and Meaning | |
What Have Boys | |
Religion Violence and Womens | |
What Does | |
The Criminalization of Youth | |
Feminists the Catholic Church and | |
Works Cited | |
Law as a Site of Struggle | |
Shariah Activism in Nigeria Under Hudud | |
Gender and EU Accession | |
Contributors | |
Index | |
Other editions - View all
Global Empowerment of Women: Responses to Globalization and Politicized ... Carolyn M. Elliott No preview available - 2008 |
Global Empowerment of Women: Responses to Globalization and Politicized ... Carolyn M Elliott No preview available - 2012 |