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KEY CONCEPTS

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Biological distinction between males and females. ... determine, to a large extent, the contexts & ways of life & work of individuals. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: KEY CONCEPTS


1
KEY CONCEPTS DEFINITIONS
  • Sex
  • Biological distinction between males and
    females. Usually taken to be chromosome
    makeup, reproductive organs, internal and
    external genitals, hormonal states etc.
  • Gender
  • Refers to a range of perceptions, opinions,
    attitudes, values, behaviours, roles positions
    which are socially, culturally economically
    attributed to men women, and which determine,
    to a large extent, the contexts ways of life
    work of individuals.
  • We become masculine or feminine based on the
    interpretation of our biology by our culture.
  • Determines our life experiences access to
    vital resources, eg. Education, health,
    employment.

2
KEY CONCEPTS DEFINITIONS Contd
  • Gender Roles
  • Refers to learning and performing the socially
    accepted characteristics for a given gender.
  • Like language are passed from generation to
    generation.
  • They are dynamic so they will change over time,
    differ across cultures will be influenced by
    various factors, such as, age, class, ethnicity
    increasingly, globalization.

3
KEY CONCEPTS DEFINITIONS Contd
  • Gender Identity
  • A personal recognition general
    acknowledgement of oneself as part of a socially
    defined group male or female, which may or may
    not be derived from the basic sex difference from
    which the group originated (Leo-Rhynie 1995).
  • Sexuality Sexual Identity
  • Linked to the erotic and involves the language
    of desire of heterosexuality, homosexuality.
  • It is more concerned with types of sexual
    partners and sexual activities.

4
KEY CONCEPTS DEFINITIONS Contd
  • Development?
  • Significantly increasing the productive
    capacities of societies, establishing new
    better (more productive) ways of doing things
    making things so as to make more wealth
    available(Crow, Thorpe et al 1988).
  • - Does not address issues of poverty,
    inequality, unemployment
    etc.
  • - Speaks mainly to productive capacity of state.
  • Ability of a society its members to meet the
    physical, emotional creative needs of people at
    an acceptable level.
  • It involves the idea of cultural, social,
    economic political betterment of individuals.

5
Theories of Development
  • Growth Modernisation Theories (1960s)
  • Development goes through stages
    Traditional ? Modern.
  • Development should pattern that of the West.
  • Developed states should assist developing states
    in their drive to become developed.

6
Theories of Development Contd
  • Theories of Underdevelopment
  • Capitalism (Karl Marx)
  • Imperialism (Lenin)
  • Dependency (Gunder Frank)
  • World Systems Theory (I. Wallerstein)

7
Theories of Development Contd
  • Boserups research showed that womens
  • position/status in some sectors had actually
  • declined. Why?
  • Was assumed that women were supplementary wage
    earners.
  • Had very little education.
  • Introduction of new technology was directed at
    men not women.
  • Male experience was generalizable to females.

8
Theoretical Approaches to Women Development
  • Women in Development (WID)
  • Arose out of the Liberal Feminist School of
    thought. Came to the fore in 1970s through the
    work of Ester Boserup.
  • Based on the assumption that women were
    outside the development process could be
    brought into the existing paradigm without a
    fundamental restructuring of the paradigm.

9
Features/Tenets of WID
  • Focused exclusively on the productive aspects of
    womens work minimizing the reproductive.
  • Focused exclusively on women.
  • Grounded in traditional modernization theory,
    therefore inflexible.
  • Unconfrontational. Accepted existing social
    structures concerned itself more with
    advocating for equal participation in education
    employment.
  • Like modernization is A-historic, therefore does
    not take into consideration the impact of class,
    race culture.

10
Policy Evolution of WID
  • Welfare Approach Assumption that population
    growth is primary cause of poverty. Focuses on
    reproductive roles.
  • Equity Approach Women seen as active
    participants in development, therefore should be
    given greater equality with men.
  • Anti-poverty Approach Concentrated on enhancing
    womens productive role.

11
Policy Evolution of WID Contd.
  • Efficiency Approach Assumption that increased
    economic participation for Third World women was
    automatically linked with equity.
  • Empowerment Approach Addresses womens strategic
    need to transform structures that oppress them
    through bottom-up process.

12
Women and Development (WAD)
  • Emerged in the mid 1970s.
  • Marxist Feminist School of Thought.
  • Rooted in the Dependency Theory.
  • Concerned that international structures were
    unfair unequal.
  • That developing countries experience unequal
    exploitative relship with developed countries.

13
Women and Development (WAD) Contd.
  • Both men women are in disadvantaged position
    are victims of intl structures.
  • Focused on the relship between women
    development processes rather than purely on
    strategies for womens integration into
    development.
  • Removal of the inequitable structures relships
    will allow women to advance.

14
Women and Development (WAD) Contd.
  • Critiques
  • Does not address issue of class difference.
  • Women seen as homogenous group
  • Does not address patriarchy as greatest source of
    inequality
  • Does not recognize or address unique problems of
    women or of those problems they have in common
    with men.
  • Pre-occupies itself with production at expense of
    womens reproductive lives.
  • Assumption of womens automatic emancipation when
    intl structures become more equitable can be
    highly discredited.

15
Gender Development (GAD)
  • A 1980s approach. Has its theoretical roots in
    Socialist Feminism, thus it uses the social
    construction of gender as the basis of womens
    oppression.
  • Does not view women as a separate group of
    social agents but that men women are
    inter-related in specific contexts
  • Emphasizes the need to understand the roles
    responsibilities of men women in a given
    environment looks at the unequal power
    relations b/n men women.

16
Gender Development (GAD) Contd
  • All social, political economic structures
    development
  • policies are re-examined from the perspective of
    gender
  • differentials.
  • Believes that relationships b/n men women can
    be
  • changed, thereby achieving gender equality
    achievable
  • through transformative change.
  • Main issues of each
  • WID exclusion of women from development as the
    problem.
  • WAD inequitable international structures as
    the problem.
  • GAD unequal power relations as being the
    problem.

17
Why Gender Not Women?
  • Category women does not represent a homogenous
    group. There is no universal position that women
    occupy in all societies.
  • Term gender covers social roles of both men
    women, e.g. gender interests rather than womens
    or mens interest.
  • Implementation of any development policy/project
    will affect or alter the lives of both men
    women.

18
Gender Mainstreaming
  • Formulated in1995 at the 4th World Conference on
  • Women in Beijing, China.
  • Process of assessing the implications for men
    women of any planned action, including
    legislation, policies programmes, in all areas
    at all levels. It is a strategy for making
    womens as well as mens concerns experiences
    an integral dimension of the design,
    implementation, monitoring evaluation of
    policies programmes in all political, economic
    social spheres, so that women men benefit
    equally inequality is not perpetuated. The
    ultimate goal is to achieve gender equality
    (ECOSOC, Agreed Conclusions 1997).

19
Creating Gender Awareness
  • Gender Analysis Focuses on understanding the
    differences in gender roles, activities, needs
    opportunities in a given context. It highlights
    the different roles learned behaviour of men
    women based on gender attributes
  • Gender Awareness Recognising that women are
    development actors as well as men that the
    nature of womens involvement is determined by
    gender relations which make their involvement
    different often unequal and that consequently
    women may have different needs, interests
    priorities which may conflict with those of men
    (March, Smyth Mukhopadhyay 1999).

20
Gender Awareness Contd
  • Women have different needs from men
  • Women have special needs
  • Women are disadvantaged as a group
  • Ultimately, womens development requires equality
    (opportunities) with men.

21
Gender Awareness Contd
  • Practical Gender Needs Those needs drawn
  • from the concrete conditions that people
  • experience. They are usually a response to an
  • immediate perceived necessity. They can usually
  • be identified by people themselves. e.g food,
  • water, clothing etc.
  • Strategic Gender Needs Concerned with
  • changing the position of people, women esp., in
  • societies. These are more long term refer to
  • equality of opportunity, greater access to
  • resources the freedom to participate in
  • decision-making.
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