International Financial Institutions

Gender Equality as Smart Economics? A Critique of the 2012 World Development Report

Citation:

Roberts, Adrienne, and Susan Soederberg. 2012. “Gender Equality as Smart Economics: A Critique of the 2012 World Development Report.” Third World Quarterly 33 (5): 949–68.

Authors: Adrienne Roberts, Susan Soederberg

Abstract:

Business now plays an increasingly prominent role in development. While the implicit links between private actors and international development institutions have been widely debated, the explicit role of financial corporations in shaping official development policy has been less well documented. We employ a feminist Marxian analysis to examine the material and discursive landscape of the 2012 World Development Report: Gender Equality and Development. Its exclusive focus on gender equality as ‘smart economics’, and the central role accorded to leading financial corporations like Goldman Sachs in the formulation of the key World Bank recommendations enable us to explore the changing landscape of the neoliberal corporatisation of develop- ment. We argue, first, that the apolitical and ahistorical representation of gender and gender equality in the WDR serves to normalise spaces of informality and insecurity, thereby expunging neoliberal-led capitalist relations of exploitation and domination, which characterise the social context in which many women in the global South live. Second, the WDR represents the interest of corporations in transforming the formerly excluded segments of the South (women) into consumers and entrepreneurs. The WDR thus represents an attempt by the World Bank and its ‘partners’ to deepen and consolidate the fundamental values and tenets of capitalist interests.

 

Topics: Development, Economies, Economic Inequality, Poverty, Gender, Women, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, International Financial Institutions, Multi-National Corporations, Political Economies

Year: 2012

Multiple Meanings of Gender Budgeting: Gender Knowledge and Economic Knowledge in the World Bank and UNDP

Citation:

Çağlar, Gülay. 2010. “Multiple Meanings of Gender Budgeting: Gender Knowledge and Economic Knowledge in the World Bank and UNDP.” In Gender Knowledge and Knowledge Networks in International Political Economy, edited by Brigitte Young and Christoph Scherrer, 55-74.  Baden-Baden, Germany: Nomos.

Author: Gülay Çağlar

Topics: Gender, Gender Budgeting, International Financial Institutions, International Organizations

Year: 2010

Refashioning IPE: What and How Gender Analysis Teaches International (Global) Political Economy

Citation:

Griffin, Penny. 2007. “Refashioning IPE: What and How Gender Analysis Teaches International (Global) Political Economy.” Review of International Political Economy 14 (4): 719-36.

Author: Penny Griffin

Abstract:

It remains the case that, in spite of the consistently high quality and quantity of gender analysis, gender has not been able to achieve more than a marginal status in International Political Economy (IPE). Increasingly visible as a category of analysis, gender remains trivialized in the minds of both the mainstream and more critical IPE approaches, as a category pertaining only to the lives of women, women's labour rights and women's social movements. This essay therefore analyses what mainstream and critical IPE approaches do and do not say about the constitution of the global political economy. My central argument is that a gender(ed) IPE analysis is absolutely central to fully understanding and explaining the processes and practices of the global political economy, but that the dominant studies and practices of IPE tend not to take into account the contributions of gender based analyses. A critique of the detailed content of gender approaches in IPE is, however, not the main purpose of this review; rather, gender and feminist analyses are the lenses with which to view IPE, with its exclusions, silences and marginalisations, as well as its openings and future paths, not the other way around.

Keywords: global political economy, gender analysis, constitution of the global political economy

Topics: Economies, Economic Inequality, Poverty, Gender, Women, Gender Analysis, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Hierarchies, Gender Equality/Inequality, Gender Equity, Globalization, International Financial Institutions, International Organizations, Political Economies, Political Participation, Rights, Human Rights, Women's Rights

Year: 2007

Women on the Front Line: The Political Economy of Ebola in Postwar West Africa

Kade Finnoff

February 25, 2015

Chancellor's Conference Room, Quinn Administration Building, UMass Boston

  • Video
  • Register
Topics
Regions

Gender and ‘Land Grabbing’ in Sub-Saharan Africa: Women’s Land Rights and Customary Land Tenure

Citation:

Chu, Jessica. 2011. “Gender and ‘Land Grabbing’ in Sub-Saharan Africa: Women’s Land Rights and Customary Land Tenure.” Development 54 (1): 35–39. doi:10.1057/dev.2010.95.

Author: Jessica Chu

Abstract:

Jessica Chu seeks to enquire into the understanding of gender impacts with the new proliferation of cross-border, large-scale land transactions or global ‘land grabs’. There has been a lack of discussion of gender in considering land grabs, most notably in the World Bank’s recent report and in the various proposed guidelines. However, by not having addressed the current debates on women’s land rights, particularly in regard to the return of customary law, current proposed solutions will fail to address the gender inequalities propagated by the land grabs.

Keywords: women's land rights, customary law, land grabs, the World Bank, gender relations

Topics: Economies, Gender, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, Land Tenure, International Financial Institutions, International Organizations, Land Grabbing, Rights, Land Rights, Property Rights Regions: Africa

Year: 2011

Fixing Women or Fixing the World? ‘Smart Economics’, Efficiency Approaches, and Gender Equality in Development

Citation:

Chant, Sylvia, and Caroline Sweetman. 2012. “Fixing Women or Fixing the World? ‘Smart Economics’, Efficiency Approaches, and Gender Equality in Development.” Gender & Development 20 (3): 517–29. doi:10.1080/13552074.2012.731812.

Authors: Sylvia Chant, Caroline Sweetman

Abstract:

This article focuses on the current trend for investing in women and girls as ‘smart economics’, which is a direct descendant of the efficiency approach to women in development (WID) prevalent in the wake of the economic crisis in the 1980s. We highlight the dangers of conflating the empowerment of women as individuals with the feminist goal of removing the structural discrimination which women face as a gendered constituency, and consider the implications for feminists in development if they adopt smart economics-speak and work in coalition with individuals and organisations who have fundamentally different aims. This has attractions in strategic terms, but risks recreating the very problems gender and development seeks to transform.

Keywords: smart economics, efficiency, feminist economics, empowerment, gender equality, World Bank

Annotation:

 

 

Topics: Development, Economies, Feminisms, Gender, Women, Girls, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, International Financial Institutions, Political Economies

Year: 2012

The Disappearing of ‘Smart Economics’? The World Development Report 2012 on Gender Equality: Some Concerns about the Preparatory Process and the Prospects for Paradigm Change

Citation:

Chant, Sylvia. 2012. “The Disappearing of ‘Smart Economics’? The World Development Report 2012 on Gender Equality: Some Concerns about the Preparatory Process and the Prospects for Paradigm Change.” Global Social Policy 12 (2): 198–218. doi:10.1177/1468018112443674.

Author: Sylvia Chant

Abstract:

This article draws on personal involvement in the World Bank’s consultation with academic ‘stakeholders’ for the World Development Report 2012 (WDR 2012) on Gender Equality and Development. The article questions the extent to which ‘smart economics’, which was the zeitgeist of the Bank’s Gender Action Plan (GAP) 2007–2010, shows signs of being replaced by a more ‘gender-sensitive’ approach in which women’s rights (rather than responsibilities) are to the fore. While the main focus of the article centres on the preparatory process for WDR 2012, brief reference is also made to the evolution and spread of ‘smart economics’ thinking, the experience of World Bank consultation, and GAP’s successor – Applying GAP Lessons: A Three-Year Road Map for Gender Mainstreaming (2010–2013).

Keywords: gender and development (GAD), gender equality, smart economics, stakeholder consultation, World Bank, World Development Report 2012

Topics: Economies, Gender, Women, Gender Mainstreaming, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, International Financial Institutions, Political Economies

Year: 2012

The Gender Dimensions of Post-Conflict Reconstruction: The Challenges in Development Aid

Citation:

Greenberg, Marcia E., and Elaine Zuckerman. 2006. “The Gender Dimensions of Post-Conflict Reconstruction: The Challenges in Development Aid.” Research Paper 62, World Institute for Development Economics Research, United Nations University, Helsinki, Finland.

Authors: Marcia E. Greenberg, Elaine Zuckerman

Abstract:

Based on analysing World Bank and other donor post-conflict reconstruction (PCR) loans and grants from rights-based, macroeconomic and microeconomic perspectives, we conclude that few PCR projects identify or address gender discrimination issues. Bank PCR investments hardly reflect Bank research recognizing that gender inequality increases the likelihood of conflict and gender equality is central to development and peace. Our conceptual framework examining women’s programmes, gender mainstreaming, and gender roles in transforming violent into peaceful societies, leads to recommending that PCR projects systematically address gender issues and promote gender equality to make peace work.

Keywords: women, reconstruction, post-conflict, equality, gender, gender and development, development aid

Topics: Development, Gender, Gender Roles, Gender Mainstreaming, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, International Financial Institutions, Post-Conflict, Post-Conflict Reconstruction

Year: 2006

Unequal Burden: Water Privatisation and Women’s Human Rights in Tanzania

Citation:

Brown, Rebecca. 2010. “Unequal Burden: Water Privatisation and Women’s Human Rights in Tanzania.” Gender & Development 18 (1): 59–67. doi:10.1080/13552071003600042.

Author: Rebecca Brown

Abstract:

Access to water is a critical component in advancing the human rights of women. Although privatisation of water services continues to be pushed by donors such as The World Bank, the available information shows that privatisations are not increasing access to water for poor women. This paper examines the human right to water and why this right is critical for women and girls. It then discusses privatisation, and the tension between contractual obligations and respect for human rights. Finally, it explores some strategies and successes from women’s involvement in the struggle against water privatisation in Tanzania.

Annotation:

In her article, Brown argues that the privatization of water is inherently at odds with the increasing international recognition of safe, accessible, and affordable water as a fundamental human right. A study of water privatization in Tanzania, the country with the lowest percentages of water access in the East African sub-region, demonstrates that when water is made into a commodity (often at the behest of international monetary institutions), those socially disadvantaged by their gender or their class suffer the most. According to Brown, supporting women to become active contributors in the implementation of human rights by incorporating them in the design, implementation, and monitoring of water service delivery can bring about lasting societal change. 
 
Quotes:
 
“Despite the fact that women are disproportionately affected by water sector reforms, reports show little or no consultation with women during the design and implementation of the privatisation scheme in Dar Es Salaam. Analysis of the ‘pro-poor’ water reform policies under this scheme failed to integrate an understanding of how impacts of reform can be gender-specific and, therefore, did not ensure equitable access and distribution for women and girls.” (64)
 
“The design and implementation of a national water strategy much ensure that the policy is formulated on the basis of equality. Every phase of the strategy must not only ensure that these women are a part of the process, but also that they are facilitated to participate as actively as possible.” (66)

Topics: Gender, Women, Girls, Gendered Power Relations, Gender Equality/Inequality, Infrastructure, Water & Sanitation, International Financial Institutions, Rights, Human Rights Regions: Africa, East Africa Countries: Tanzania

Year: 2010

Fitting Gender into Development Institutions

Citation:

Razavi, Shahra. 1997. “Fitting Gender into Development Institutions.” World Development 25 (7): 1111–25.

Author: Shahra Razavi

Abstract:

This paper analyzes some of the more prominent strands of gender and development (GAD) discourse that have justified the need for policy attention to women on efficiency and poverty grounds. The analysis is set within the context of organizational politics, as well as the changing national and international policy environment of the past decade which has hastened the need for gender lobbies to forge strategic alliances with like-minded social forces. While admitting the analytical and methodological weaknesses that very often characterize the gender policy discourses, the paper draws attention to the political imperatives and institutional constraints within which these arguments have taken shape. A clearer recognition of these constraints and the fact that gender discourses are context-specific raises questions about the allegations of instrumentalism that are often levelled against them by institutional outsiders.

Keywords: gender, WID, development institutions, advocacy, efficiency, poverty

Topics: Development, Economies, Poverty, Gender, Gendered Discourses, International Financial Institutions, International Organizations

Year: 1997

Pages

© 2023 CONSORTIUM ON GENDER, SECURITY & HUMAN RIGHTSLEGAL STATEMENT All photographs used on this site, and any materials posted on it, are the property of their respective owners, and are used by permission. Photographs: The images used on the site may not be downloaded, used, or reproduced in any way without the permission of the owner of the image. Materials: Visitors to the site are welcome to peruse the materials posted for their own research or for educational purposes. These materials, whether the property of the Consortium or of another, may only be reproduced with the permission of the owner of the material. This website contains copyrighted materials. The Consortium believes that any use of copyrighted material on this site is both permissive and in accordance with the Fair Use doctrine of 17 U.S.C. § 107. If, however, you believe that your intellectual property rights have been violated, please contact the Consortium at info@genderandsecurity.org.

Subscribe to RSS - International Financial Institutions