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El. knyga: The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development

Edited by , Edited by (Santa Clara University, USA), Edited by (University of California, Davis, USA, and Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University, UK)
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The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development provides a comprehensive statement and reference point for gender and development policy making and practice in an international and multi-disciplinary context. Specifically, it provides critical reviews and appraisals of the current state of gender and development and considers future trends. It includes theoretical and practical approaches as well as empirical studies. The international reach and scope of the Handbook and the contributors’ experiences allow engagement with and reflection upon these bridging and linking themes, as well as the examining the politics and policy of how we think about and practice gender and development.

Organized into eight inter-related sections, the Handbook contains over 50 contributions from leading scholars, looking at conceptual and theoretical approaches, environmental resources, poverty and families, women and health related services, migration and mobility, the effect of civil and international conflict, and international economies and development. This Handbook provides a wealth of interdisciplinary information and will appeal to students and practitioners in Geography, Development Studies, Gender Studies and related disciplines.

Recenzijos

"The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Development is a comprehensive - and excellent - addition to contemporary scholarship in the field of gender and development (GAD). It provides a substantial compendium of individual articles gathered into eight thematic chapters, and covering a broad range of substantive, theoretical and conceptual issues pertaining to gender analyses of development in global contexts. The editors, themselves very experienced academics and authors in this area, have gathered together valuable contributions from both well-known scholars and from newer voices from all over the world to compile this collection." Gender & Development, Suzanne Clisby, University of Hull, UK

Acknowledgements xiii
Notes on contributors xiv
List of figures xxi
List of tables xxii
List of boxes xxiii
1 Introduction to The Handbook of Gender and Development
1(8)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
Part I The making of the field: concepts and case studies 9(70)
2 Introduction to Part I
11(3)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
3 Men, masculinities, and development
14(10)
Jane L. Parpart
4 Gender mainstreaming: changing the course of development?
24(11)
Caroline Sweetman
5 Gender and postcolonialism
35(12)
Sarah A. Radcliffe
6 Gender and religion: 'gender-critical turns' and other turns in post-religious and post-secular feminisms
47(11)
Maria Jaschok
7 Feminist political ecology
58(9)
Rebecca Elmhirst
8 Navigating gender and development
67(12)
Ragnhild Lund
Part II Environmental resources: production and protection 79(106)
9 Introduction to Part II
81(4)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
Land Use And Agricultural Resources
10 Changing access to land for women in sub-Saharan Africa
85(10)
Michael Kevane
11 Gender, agrarian reforms and land rights
95(11)
Susie Jacobs
12 Exploring gendered rural spaces of agrobiodiversity management: a case study from Kerala, South India
106(11)
Isabelle Kunze
Janet Momsen
13 Gender relations in biodiversity conservation and management
117(12)
Patricia L. Howard
14 Colonisation and fire: gendered dimensions of indigenous fire knowledge retention and revival
129(9)
Christine Eriksen
Don L. Hankins
Living Resources
15 Gender and livestock in developing nations
138(11)
Alice J. Hovorka
16 Fisheries and aquaculture need a gender counterrevolution
149(13)
Meryl J. Williams
Mining Resources
17 Gender in and gender and mining: feminist approaches
162(11)
Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt
18 Just picking up stones: gender and technology in a small-scale gold mining site
173(14)
Hannelore Verbrugge
Steven Van Wolputte
Part III Perspectives on population and poverty 185(60)
19 Introduction to Part III
187(4)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
20 Gender and poverty in the Global South
191(13)
Sylvia Chant
21 At home in the city? Gender and urban poverty
204(11)
Ann Varley
22 Caribbean kinship research: from pathology to structure to negotiated family processes
215(10)
Christine Barrow
23 Gender, development, children and young people
225(11)
Jo Boyden
Gina Crivello
Virginia Morrow
24 Serving the transnational surrogate market as a development strategy?
236(9)
Carolin Schurr
Bettina Fredrich
Part IV Health, survival and services 245(48)
25 Introduction to Part IV
247(3)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
26 Gender and health
250(11)
Barbara Patt
27 Rethinking community and participation in water governance
261(11)
Farhana Sultana
28 Gender equality and developing world toilet provision
272(10)
Clara Greed
29 Gender, pollution, waste, and waste management
282(11)
Elizabeth Thomas-Hope
Part V Mobilities: services and spaces 293(96)
30 Introduction to Part V
295(3)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
31 Transnational domestic work and the politics of development
298(11)
Brenda S.A. Yeoh
Shirlena Huang
Yi'En Cheng
32 Care, women and migration in the Global South
309(10)
Eleonore Kofman
Parvati Raghuram
33 Gender, post-trafficking and citizenship in Nepal
319(11)
Janet G. Townsend
Nina Laurie
Meena Poudel
Diane Richardson
34 Female sex trafficking: gendered vulnerability
330(11)
Vidyamali Samarasinghe
35 Tourism and cultural landscapes of gender in developing countries
341(12)
Margaret B. Swain
36 Impact of ICTs on Muslim women
353(12)
Salma Abbasi
Left Behinds
37 Gendered costs to the "left behind": a challenge to the migration and development nexus
365(10)
Rebecca Maria Torres
38 Women and public spaces in rural China
375(8)
Li Sun
39 The influence of gender and ethnicity in the creation of social space amongst women in rural Sri Lanka
383(8)
F. Munira Ismail
Part VI Conflict and post-conflict: victims or victors? 389(52)
40 Introduction to Part VI
391(5)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
41 La Ruta, The Pacific Way: Women for a Negotiated Solution to the Armed Conflict
396(11)
Adriana Parra-Fox
42 Gender and post-conflict rehabilitation
407(11)
Colette Harris
43 Women, camps, and "bare life"
418(11)
Ayesha Anne Nibbe
44 Researching sexual violence in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo: methodologies, ethics, and the production of knowledge in an African warscape
429(12)
Patricia Daley
Part VII Economics: empowerment and enrichment 441(68)
45 Introduction to Part VII
443(3)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
46 Crisis of capital accumulation and global restructuring of social reproduction: a conceptual note
446(6)
Faranak Miraftab
47 Women producers, collective enterprise and fair trade
452(13)
Sally Smith
Elaine Jones
Carol Wills
48 The entrepreneurial landscape for African women: sectors and characteristics from microenterprises to large businesses
465(14)
Anita Spring
49 Gendering entrepreneurship in Romania: survival in a post-communist borderland
479(11)
Margareta Amy Lelea
50 Gender empowerment and microcredit in Bangladesh
490(8)
Shahnaz Hug-Hussain
51 Women, microcredit programs and repayment challenges: the Sri Lankan experience
498(11)
Seela Aladuwaka
Part VIII Development organizations: people and institutions 509(62)
52 Introduction to Part VIII
511(4)
Anne Coles
Leslie Gray
Janet Momsen
53 Promoting gender equality in the changing global landscape of international development cooperation
515(12)
Rosalind Eyben
54 Gender equality, women's empowerment and the UN: what is it all about?
527(11)
Patricia Holden
55 Building gender into vulnerability analysis: an example using the "Crunch Model"
538(12)
Vu Minh Hai
Ines Smyth
Anne Coles
56 Development people: how does gender matter?
550(10)
Anne-Meike Fechter
57 Engendering understandings of faith-based organizations: intersections between religion and gender in development and humanitarian interventions
560(11)
Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh
Index 571
Anne Coles is a Research Associate at the International Gender Studies Centre, Oxford University, UK. She was previously a senior social development adviser in Britains Department for International Development and has chaired two development NGOs. Her research interests include migration, peoples responses to harsh environments, and public health. Recent publications include Gender, Water and Development, Gender and Family among Transnational Professionals (as co-editor and contributor), and Windtower (2007, reprinted 2009).

Leslie Gray is a geographer and Executive Director of the Environmental Studies Institute at Santa Clara University, USA. Her current research considers agrarian and environmental change in Burkina Faso and food justice in California. She has published articles on environmental policy, land degradation, and womens access to resources in Burkina Faso and Sudan. This research has been funded by the National Science Foundation, Fulbright/IIE and the Social Science Research Council.

Janet Momsen has taught at universities in the UK, Canada, Brazil, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Singapore, and the USA. She is Emerita Professor of Geography at the University of California, Davis, USA and was a Board member of AWID. She is currently a Senior Research Associate in the Oxford University Centre for the Environment, a Research Associate in the International Gender Studies Centre at Oxford University, and a Trustee of the development NGO, INTRAC. She has published over 170 articles in refereed journals and chapters in books and authored or edited 18 books.