The Global Network of UNESCO
Chairs on Gender celebrates the release of their first e-book of gender case
studies: Gender Perspectives in Case Studies Across Continents,
co-edited by Gloria Bonder, Coordinator of the Global Network, and Brenda Gael
McSweeney, Initiator of the UNESCO/UNITWIN Network on Gender, Culture, & Development.
This volume also features a Foreword
authored by Saniye Gülser Corat, Director of the UNESCO Division for Gender
Equality. She is “convinced that the case studies
included in this E-Book will help us understand different realities and
challenges better and provide us with the possibility to formulate reality
based policies and initiatives.” Promoting Gender Equality is an overarching
priority of the Organization through 2021.
The full text of this
publication can be found at: http://goo.gl/31btQ
The volume's eight
essays illustrate the breadth and diversity of the issues that affect the
lives and status of women in communities across the world. These chapters are:
1.
Decentralization
and women’s rights in Latin America, Gloria Bonder
Analyzes the local impact of public policy decentralization processes in Bolivia, Ecuador, El Salvador/Honduras,
and Paraguay, on women’s participation and health. Examines the political,
institutional, and cultural factors that influenced the contrasts in effects
between these different areas, and emphasizes the importance of gathering
women’s testimonies in the context of their own voices and perspectives. (also available
in Spanish)
Analyzes the local impact of public policy decentralization processes in Bolivia, Ecuador, El Salvador/Honduras,
Rights & Gender in Bolivia |
2.
Discourses
emerging from the experiences of the women-mothers victims of violence, Mary Koutselini and Floria Valanidou
Explores the prevailing and
often coexistent discourses of denial, self-blame, powerlessness, tolerance, compassion,
and dependency, and the influence of these narratives on female victims of
violence. Illustrated through seventeen in-depth interviews with mothers in
Cyprus who were or had been victims.
3.
Women’s
organizations in Madrid: Socialization for empowerment in the Spanish
democratic post-transition, Virginia Maquieira D'Angelo
Follows the rise of women
workers and housewives’ organizations in the 1980s and their emergent feminist
awareness. Explores the context of these organizations, the meanings assigned
to them by their participants, the obstacles they faced, and the evolution of
the organizations into a larger women’s movement in Spain. (also available in
Spanish)
4.
The
violation of family spaces in some Moroccan women writers’ fiction, Fouzia
Rhissassi
Analyzes Moroccan women’s
literature as an outlet through which female authors reappraise traditional
spaces, rejection of silence and exclusion, and break taboos to give visibility
to women’s experiences. Illuminates the themes of tackling persistent gender
inequalities worldwide in education, livelihoods, and political voice, plus
gender-based violence.
Photo: Brenda McSweeney |
5.
Another
View of Africa: A photo essay on female education and empowerment in Burkina
Faso,
Scholastique Kompaoré and Brenda Gael McSweeney with Cassandra Fox
Demonstrates the positive,
time-saving effects of technology on women’s domestic workloads, thus thus freeing up time for women and girls to pursue educational and lucrative activities. Presents a hopeful contrast to the typical global media depiction of life in
Africa. (also available in French)
6.
God
First, Second the Market: A Case Study, Sirleaf Market Women’s Fund of
Liberia
Explores the organization’s
ongoing efforts to aid Liberian women through the revitalization of markets,
boosting literacy, and providing access to credit. Highlights the candid
profiles of market women and depicts their courageous struggle to overcome
adversity and their role in the reconstruction of Liberia, its communities, and
its economy.
7.
Srihaswani or Creative Manual Skills for Self Reliant
Development: A gender case study, 1996-2012, Krishno Dey, Chandana Dey, and
Brenda Gael McSweeney
Photo: Brenda McSweeney |
8.
Strengthening Networks for Women in Science and Engineering, Deborah Belle and Sheryl Grace
Illustrates systematic
approaches implemented at Boston University to increasing representation and
advancement of women faculty in science and engineering careers, namely through
strengthening professional networks. Identifies the enduring barriers women face
in professional arenas traditionally dominated by men.
The eight essays in this volume
reflect the commitment of the Global Network to understanding and contributing
to overcome obstacles that prevent the achievement of women’s well being, their
active participation in the development of their communities and their
struggles for greater equality, empowerment, citizenship and gender justice. ~by Lucia Hsiao, Student-Scholar Partner to Resident Scholar Brenda Gael McSweeney, Women's Studies Research Center/Brandeis University
E-book at: http://goo.gl/31btQ