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ID137742
Title ProperTracking the gender politics of the Millennium Development Goals
Other Title Informationstruggles for interpretive power in the international development agenda
LanguageENG
AuthorKabeer, Naila
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article tracks the gender politics of the processes that led to the adoption of the Millennium Development Goals and that continued to feature in subsequent policy debates. It suggests that this politics is rooted in tensions between conceptualisations of rights and capabilities that characterised the preceding decade. While feminist organisations made major gains on women’s rights during 1990s, it was a narrow version of human capabilities that defined the MDGs. Feminist efforts since then have focused on defending sexual and reproductive rights in the face of the attacks mounted by an ‘unholy alliance’ led by the Vatican and supported by a shifting group of countries and religious groups. This has led to the relative neglect of the economic injustices associated with the dominant market-led model of development.
`In' analytical NoteThird World Quarterly Vol.36, No.2; 2015: p.377-395
Journal SourceThird World Quarterly Vol: 36 No 2
Key WordsHuman Rights ;  Civil Society ;  Feminism ;  Gender ;  International Actors ;  Development Agenda ;  United Nations – UN ;  International Organization – IO ;  Post-Millennium Development Goals ;  Millennium Development Goals - IDG ;  International Development Agenda – IDA


 
 
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