Power, Gender and Social Change in AfricaRaj Bardouille, Margaret Grieco Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2009 M03 26 - 359 pages Gender plays a hugely significant and too often under-considered role in predicting how accessible resources such as education, wage-based employment, physical and mental health care, adequate nutrition and housing will be to an individual or community. According to a 2001 World Bank report titled Engendering Development—Through Gender Equality in Rights, Resources, and Voice, enormous disparities exist between men and women in terms of basic rights and the power to determine the future, both in Africa and around the globe. A better understanding of the links between gender, public policy and development outcomes would allow for more effective policy formulation and implementation at many levels. This book, through its discussion of the challenges, achievements and lessons learned in efforts to attain gender equality, sheds light on these important issues. The book contains chapters from an interdisciplinary group of scholars, including sociologists, economists, political scientists, scholars of law, anthropologists, historians and others. The work includes analysis of strategic gender initiatives, case studies, research, and policies as well as conceptual and theoretical pieces. With its format of ideas, resources and recorded experiences as well as theoretical models and best practices, the book is an important contribution to academic and political discourse on the intricate links between gender, power, and social change in Africa and around the world. |
From inside the book
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... Globally African Women as Scholar-Activists in Feminist and Gender Studies Mary J. Osirim..............................................................................................94 6. The Anthropological Collaborator: Feminist ...
... global economic crisis is only the latest in the phenomena that disproportionally affect them. The burdens are enormous. As1 the Chinese proverb says: “women hold up more than half the sky.” I have termed the culmination of the denial ...
... global north often regard African women with profound pity, sometimes bordering on condescension. We may slip into essentializing the women as global victims with little to no agency. We forget that wonderful South African saying which ...
... global stage. Educational levels for females must approach international standards to enable girls and women to fully participate in all arenas. On the constitutional level, I have been deeply honored to work with the founding mothers ...
... Global Critical Race Feminism: An International Reader, 392 (Adrien Katherine Wing ed., NYU Press 2000). See Adrien Katherine Wing, “Women's Rights and Africa's Evolving Landscape: The Women's Protocol of the Banjul Charter,” in Africa ...