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Well-intended measures: Conceptualizing gender as a social structure in post-conflict policy development

Gendered Perspectives on Conflict and Violence: Part B

ISBN: 978-1-78350-893-8

Publication date: 18 June 2014

Abstract

Purpose

This chapter critically analyzes the outcomes of a legal reform enacted in Bali to address unintended consequences of a World Bank policy that undermined women’s economic, legal, and human rights.

Design/methodology/approach

This qualitative exploratory inquiry employs ethnographic data including participant observations and 18 interviews conducted in Denpasar, Bali.

Findings

The analysis suggests that policy measures intended to empower women which fail to address the influence of gender in the formation and functioning of social institutions reinforce conceptualizations of gender that constrain women’s autonomy and reify patriarchal sociocultural institutions.

Research implications

Conceptualizations of gender in post-conflict research have lagged behind the richness of theories pertaining to gender as a social structure. Incorporating analyses of gender ideologies into the research phase of policy development will bridge this gap between theory and application.

Practical and social implications

Calls for women’s empowerment in the wake of the collapse of central governance structures, such as in the Arab Spring, must be accompanied by attention of feminist researchers and activists ensuring that policy measures intended to address barriers to women’s equality move beyond conceptions of empowerment that privilege economic capital. Dominant frameworks employed by microcredit programs and legal reformers emphasizing economic independence without attending to structural causes of women’s marginalization run the ironic risk of more deeply entrenching harmful social institutions.

Originality

This project allows women’s voices to reciprocally transform social theories and practices, contributing to understandings of the influence of gender in legal reform efforts and gender as a social structure.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

My sincere thanks to Leslie Dwyer for the guidance and time you poured into this project, for your dedicated mentorship, and for generously opening your home to me while I conducted my fieldwork. This final written work would not exist without the support of my partner, William Mount, as well as the intellectual support of Shannon Davis at the George Mason University Department of Sociology, Sandra Cheldelin at the George Mason School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, and Chris Swader at the Higher School of Economics, Moscow; thank you to you all!

Citation

Degi Mount, E.A. (2014), "Well-intended measures: Conceptualizing gender as a social structure in post-conflict policy development", Gendered Perspectives on Conflict and Violence: Part B (Advances in Gender Research, Vol. 18B), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 45-71. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-21262014000018B006

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2014 Emerald Group Publishing Limited