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Gender Globalization Health

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Title: Gender Globalization Health


1
Gender Globalization - Health
  • Fogarty International Center
  • Advisory Board Meeting
  • May 24, 2005

2
Gender is a central political determinant of
health
  • Gender refers to structural inequalities marked
    by unequal access for women and men to material
    and non material resources. It is not just a
    question of roles and behaviors or income but
    it permeates social institutions and political
    structures and processes. It is an organizing
    principle of social life.
  • (Gender and Global Governance 2000)

3
Gender Inequality A problem with a solution
  • Two decades of innovation, experience, and
    activism have shown that achieving the goal of
    greater gender equality and womens empowerment
    is possible.
  • BUT
  • Because gender inequality is deeply rooted in
    entrenched attitudes, societal institutions, and
    market forces, political commitment.is
    essential Millennium Project Task Force 3
    report 2005

4
Key question
  • Whos got the power?
  • The chasm between what we know and what we do is
    deeply and fundamentally political.
  • This is a consequence of neutralizing the problem
    MP Task force MCH 2005

5
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6
Gender, Health and Globalization
  • DRIVING FORCES
  • THEIR IMPACT
  • AGENCY
  • ETHICS
  • AGENDA

7
New context new challenges
  • In the face of globalization and modernization we
    need
  • a conceptual tool kit
  • analytical frameworks
  • Better evidence
  • Understanding of patterns rather than causality
  • We need a better understanding of the
    relationship between changed conditions of life
    and the health of individuals and communities
  • direct and indirect pathways

8
Example Dimensions of gender equality
  • MP task force 3 framework three interrelated
    domains
  • The capabilities domain basic human abilities as
    measured by education, health and nutrition
  • The access to resources and opportunities domain
    use capabilities
  • The security domain reduced vulnerability

9
Driving Forces Three social constructs and
dynamics
  • Gender
  • Globalization

Health
10
Initial Explorations globalization is gendered
  • The impact of globalization processes on health
    are gendered life chances and life choices
  • By shifting gender relations globalization
    becomes a pathway to differential health impact
  • The globalization of health is also pathway to
    changed gender relationships
  • Kickbusch/Hartwig/List Globalization, Gender and
    Health in the 21st Century. Palgrave 2005

11
Driving Force Health
  • Health is created where people live, love, work
    and play.
  • Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion 1986
  • Health systems are
  • Social institutions

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15
Association of health, social change and
modernity smoking
  • Signifier of modernity (accessible and
    affordable)
  • Correlation between gender development index and
    rate of female smoking
  • Multidimensional me contemporary, feminine,
    sensory pleasure

16
Association of health, social change and
modernityreproductive health and rights
  • Control over fertility, access to contraception
    and safe abortion
  • Safe pregnancies, lactation, child survival,
    freedom from diseases of the reproductive tract
  • Access to information and freedom to exercise
    reproductive choice, freedom from violence. right
    to enjoy and healthy sexual life ICPD

17
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18
Modernity Health is an individual right
19
Driving Force Globalization
  • Internationalization
  • Liberalization
  • Universalization
  • Westernization modernization
  • DETERRITORIALIZATION
  • Reconfiguration of geography, so that social
    space is no longer wholly mapped in terms of
    territorial places distances and borders

20
Globalization everyday lives
  • Division of labor - gendered change in labor
    markets
  • Impact on paid and unpaid labor
  • Changing relations of caring at household level
  • Commercialization and Privatization (water
    health)
  • Product opportunities
  • The intensification of worldwide social
    relations which link distant localities in such a
    way that local happenings are shaped by events
    occurring many miles away and vice versa.
  • Giddens 1990

21
The new global geography Scapes
22
Direct Impacts on health, health services and
health access
  • Commercialization and Privatization (water
    health)
  • Structural adjustment
  • Trade in health services
  • WTO agreements
  • TRIPS
  • Foreign direct investment
  • Mobility of health workers
  • Health both impacts on - and is an outcome of
    processes of globalization (WHO Commission on
    Macro Economics)
  • Access to health and reproductive health services
    is part of larger global restructuring

23
Health systems as core social institutions
  • The health system as a core social institution is
    part of the very fabric of social and civic life,
    has enormous potential to contribute to
    democratic development
  • Health claims are assets of citizenship.

24
Direct lifestyle impacts The rise of the MNC
  • GLOBAL OBESITY
  • The institution that most changes our lives we
    least understand
  • JK Galbraith 1976

25
MNC Gendered product opportunity
  • Selling tobacco products to women has been
    described as the largest single product
    marketing opportunity in the world
  • Framework Convention on Tobacco Control

First global public health treaty
26
MNC Sex as a product
  • Sex itself is a global driving force for new
    technologies, markets and new consumers and
    global crime networks
  • We badly need a political economy of sexuality.
    (that) avoids the tendency to see sexuality as
    private and the political and economic as public.
    D. Altman 2001

27
Gendered global mobility
  • Migration and increased mobility of women
  • new slave markets
  • Forced prostitution
  • Domestic workers
  • Low paid service work
  • remittances

28
Globalization and its impact
  • Fragmented and contradictory
  • Opportunities and risks
  • Direct and indirect pathways
  • Constant interplay of structure and agency
  • The local and the global

29
Gender and Globalization
  • Sex and gender are at the core of global change
    not just an additional variable of analysis
  • Characterized by ambiguity
  • New identities
  • New cognitive images of male and female roles
  • New social relations globalization impacts on
    gender relations in all its dimensions issue of
    politics and power

30
Key social consequence
  • A. Giddens and M. Castells both maintain that the
    social processes brought about by globalization
    will bring about the downfall of patriarchy as a
    system of social organization similar to the
    revolution of the making of the working class
    in the 19th century.

31
Driving force gender
  • Human rights, peace
  • Reproductive rights
  • Politics of place/ Agenda 21, sustainable
    Development
  • Micro economics
  • Health and human rights
  • Violence

32
Gender politics in global governance
  • UN system UNIFEM, INSTRAW, CEDAW, new structures
    within organizations WID
  • UN Decade and Conferences women, population,
    human rights, agenda 21, social development,
    UNGASS HIV/AIDS, children
  • Transnational NGOs and network governance
  • Soft law womens rights as human rights
  • Millennium Development Goals

33
Empowerment means to exercise Agency
  • .use the rights, capabilities, resources, and
    opportunities to make strategic choices and
    decisions
  • Leadership opportunities and participation in
    political institutions
  • Poor women, adolescents, conflict and post
    conflict settings

34
Human agency
  • Human beings are subjects who can affect the
    interplay of these forces as they carry out their
    social roles
  • Resistance

35
A new political space
  • The very nature of politics has changed
    Globalization has provided opportunities for
    women, lesbians and gay men, disabled persons,
    indigenous people to mobilize to a degree that
    was generally unavailable to them in territorial
    politics.
  • (Scholte 1999)

36
Practical and gendered resistance
  • Phenomenal flow of ideas
  • Success of ICPD CAIRO Agenda
  • Different forms of resistance - multiple
    practices, strategies and sites of resistance
  • Constant renegotiation of boundaries

37
Health HIV/AIDS is at the frontier of global
governance
  • Human rights
  • Creates new forms of global cooperation to fight
    disease (voice and governance)
  • Access to treatment and care
  • Intellectual property and trade
  • Vaccine and drug development
  • Public private partnerships

38
Health HIV/AIDS could be the frontier of gender
politics in a globalized world
  • Opens the dialogue on sex and sexual politics
    (but strengthens Western disease concepts)
  • Poses central challenges to existing social,
    economic and gender relations
  • Reflects the failure of policies that did not
    address gender and empowerment

39
Relevance of ethical theory in a global world
  • Injustice
  • Clarify means and goal
  • Prove moral lens
  • Provide basis for collaboration moral
    commitments (Cahill)
  • Capabilities approach
  • Rights based theory
  • Global public goods

40
Central Human Capabilities
  • Life, Bodily health and integrity
  • Senses, imagination, thought,emotions
  • Practical reason
  • Affiliation
  • Other species
  • Play
  • Control over ones environment
  • (Nussbaum)

41
A life worth living
  • A life that lacks any one of these capabilities,
    no matter what else it has, will fall short of
    being a good human life it describes the task
    of public policy to move all citizens above a
    basic threshold and sets an agenda for a society
    in which both males and females could learn both
    to love and to reason (Nussbaum)

42
A new global mindset
  • Implicit in the term globalization rather then
    the older internationalization is the idea that
    we are moving beyond the era of growing ties
    between nations and are beginning to contemplate
    something beyond the existing conception of the
    nation state.
  • Peter Singer, Princeton 2002

43
Evidence Research on political determinants of
health
  • Public health research will increasingly need to
    incorporate not only epidemiological evidence but
    move into compiling new types of evidence related
    to implementation this inevitably relates to
    the analysis of the distribution of power and
    resources within and between countries and
    different actors.
  • Recommended at Global Forum on Health Research
    2004
  • Gendered Research Agenda

44
Evidence base 1
  • an evidence based understanding of the medical,
    behavioral or public health interventions that
    will successfully address the primary causes of
    . mortality and morbidity

45
Evidence base 2
  • an evidence based understanding of and approach
    to the social, political, economic and
    institutional structures that will enable
    societies locally, nationally and globally to
    ensure that all people have access to those
    interventions.
  • MP task force interim report 4

Power mapping
46
Political determinants
  • This means opening up a line of inquiry, analysis
    and evidence building that begins not ends with
    the social and political determinants of health
    and health care MP task force interim report 4
  • And that recognizes their global nature Risks in
    the 21st century are transnational and all
    attempts to control them lead into the
    international arena

47
Move away from methodological nationalism
  • Study transnational issues and the global /local
    interface
  • study und understand the production of risk at a
    global level and the localization of risk
    through the globalization of everyday life
  • Study how the global public goods produced for
    economic globalization can be complemented by GPG
    that address the other dimensions of
    globalization

48
Sex does matter. It matters in ways that we did
not expect.. Undoubtedly, it matters in ways that
we have not yet begun to imagine.
IOM 2001
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