The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
24 results
Sort by:
World Affairs Online
In: Sustainable development goals series 5: Gender equality
In: Sustainable Development Goals Series
Intro -- Foreword by Dr. Purnima Mane -- Foreword by Martha Alter Chen -- Preface: Insights into the Book -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- Acronyms -- SDG 5: How Real? How Sustainable? -- 1 SDG 5: Addressing Gaps and Accelerating Progress Towards a Feminist, Intersectional, and Transformative Vision for Change -- Abstract -- Introduction -- The Road to SDG 5 -- The Beijing Platform for Action: 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women -- Millennium Development Goals: World View of the 'Rich Men's Club'? -- Sustainable Development Goals and SDG 5: Restoring the Spirit and Vision of Beijing Commitments -- SDGs and SDG 5: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back? -- Although Consultative, the Participation and Voices of Women's Rights Organizations from the Global South Remained Constrained During the Negotiations that Shaped Agenda 2030 -- The SDGs Do Not Challenge Neoliberal Power Structures and Paradigms-They Reinforce Them -- The Underlying Assumption of a Linear Relationship Between Economic Growth and Gender Equality is Questionable -- There Is No Accountability Set for the Private Sector Despite Its Growing Prominence and the Central Role It Is Expected to Play in Achieving Agenda 2030 -- Empowerment and Human Rights Perspectives Are Largely Rhetorical in Agenda 2030, and Gender Transformative Approaches that Engage with Men and Masculinities Are Conspicuous by Their Absence -- Critical Concerns Around Unpaid Care, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights, and Women's Participation and Leadership Are Watered Down Within the Framing of SDG Targets -- The Promise to 'Leave No One Behind' Is Weakened by Unclear Articulation and Operationalization of Intersectionality and Inclusion -- What is Measured, Matters, and What is NOT Measured, Matters Even More for Monitoring Progress and Holding Duty-Bearers Accountable.
In: Sustainable development goals series, SDG-5
This book offers a unique intersectional perspective on gender equality, SDG5. It presents an intersection of gender with caste, class, region, ethnic and sexual identities, and other structural drivers of inequalities in various development sectors. It presents case studies and empirical findings from development practice and policymaking and highlights the challenges to implementing SDG5 in practice. It discusses policies to promote gender equality and prevent violence against women and girls, and women in decision-making and leadership positions. The chapters reinstate that gender equality is possible only if unequal gender norms are transformed to recognize women and girls as independent economic entities and not merely homemakers providing unpaid care. It also analyzes to deconstruct the idea of monolithic masculinity to recognize gender diversity and men's role in providing care. The book shows how much has been achieved, yet how far is also left to go. It is an essential reference point for researchers, policymakers, students, and scholars across gender studies, women's studies, and sociology.--
In: Journal of comparative family studies, Volume 34, Issue 1, p. 61-74
ISSN: 1929-9850
Recent research evidence on domestic and sexual violence have linked violence with increased risk of acquiring HTV and adverse health in women. This paper explores the link between wife abuse and different aspects of male sexual health using data from 2 surveys among 1279 married men and 553 married women in a Mumbai slum community. Three categories of sexual health problems were considered: symptoms indicative of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), performance related problems and the prevalent South Asian semen anxiety. Ten percent of both men and women reported wife beating in the last year. The severity of abuse reported by women is clearly correlated with the prevalence of all three categories of the husband's sexual problems as perceived by the wife. Among perpetrators of abuse we show the expected correlation of reported STI symptoms, extramarital sex and domestic violence. However, the semen-related problems are also associated with increased risk behaviour. Performance related problems are shown to be strongly associated with domestic violence among perpetrators. Other important correlates of abuse are related to personal history. Both perpetrators of violence and beaten women were more likely to come from families with a history of abuse. Having in-laws who were dissatisfied with the dowry increased the likelihood of experiencing physical abuse by nearly 4 times. Husbands and wife's sexual and reproductive health are clearly related in complex ways, and pathways not limited to sexual risk behaviour and transmission of STIs only. Wife beating is an important factor affecting women's health, and importantly linked with the sexual fears and inadequacies in men.
In: International migration: quarterly review, Volume 23, Issue 1, p. 97-121
ISSN: 1468-2435
In: South Asian Journal of Law, Policy, and Social Research, Volume I, Issue I, 2020
SSRN
In: International migration review: IMR, Volume 12, Issue 1, p. 3-38
ISSN: 1747-7379, 0197-9183
Classical "functionalist" theories of migration are compared in this paper with neo-Marxian models and both are found inadequate to explain international trends in migration and the Canadian experience of immigration since World War II. An alternative "global systems model" of international and internal migration is put forward which takes into account the movements within and between industrial and postindustrial societies, as well as movements from less developed to more developed areas.
In: International migration review: IMR, Volume 12, Issue 1, p. 3-38
ISSN: 0197-9183
In: Canadian studies in population: official journal of the Canadian Population Society, Volume 48, Issue 2-3, p. 361-385
ISSN: 1927-629X
In: Development in practice, Volume 29, Issue 1, p. 53-64
ISSN: 1364-9213
In: Men and masculinities, Volume 17, Issue 5, p. 467-501
ISSN: 1552-6828
Efforts to promote gender equality have recognized the importance of involving men and boys. Yet, in general, we have done little in terms of large-scale research in the Global South to understand how men are responding to the global gender equality agenda. This article presents findings from the International Men and Gender Equality Survey (IMAGES), one of the most comprehensive efforts of its kind to gather data on men's attitudes and practices related to gender equality in eight low- and middle-income countries: Brazil, Chile, Mexico, India, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Rwanda. It provides a current picture of men's attitudes about gender and gender equality, explores the determinants of equitable attitudes, and investigates the associations between equitable attitudes and relationship behaviors. We find that men report positive but ambivalent attitudes toward gender equality, and that education, income, and more equitable practices in men's childhood homes are associated with men's more equitable attitudes and practices. Finally, we show that in most countries, men's equitable attitudes are also associated with more equitable practices, including more participation in the home and reduced use of violence, as well as higher sexual satisfaction. The findings suggest both the need for program approaches that change attitudes, as well as policy and structural approaches that create lived experiences of gender equality for men. Given how much early childhood experiences influenced men's adult attitudes and practices, the findings also emphasize the need for programs and policies to promote equitable caregiving.
In: International migration review: IMR, Volume 16, Issue 2, p. 497
ISSN: 1747-7379, 0197-9183
In: Environmental science and pollution research: ESPR, Volume 30, Issue 40, p. 93054-93069
ISSN: 1614-7499