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click for larger view Gender, Development, and Citizenship

SERIES: Focus on Gender
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EDITED BY: Caroline Sweetman

SERIES: Focus on Gender
ISBN-10: 0855985054 
ISBN-13: 9780855985059  STOCK CODE: 00255055
AVAILABILITY: In Print   PUBLISHER: Oxfam Publishing
FORMAT: Paperback (pp: 101)   246 x 189mm   PUBLISHED: 01 Dec 2003
READERSHIP:  Postgraduate, Activists and Campaigners, Professional and Practitioners, Undergraduate,
PRICE:  £12.95 (inc. VAT)  

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DESCRIPTION

Focusing on citizenship means thinking about the relationships between individuals and the stated in which they live. What difference does having citizenship rights mean for people's lives? Are structures of governance efficient, and responsive to people's needs?

This book examines ways in which citizenship is denies. and argues that citizenship can be used to demand and advance human rights. Women often find themselves escluded from full citizenship by legal systems which leave men to look after the interests of their female dependents. But women need recognition as citizens in their own right, to protect them from exploitation and abuse. People from marginalised communities also often find that the state fails to respond to their needs and interests. Finally, migrants - a growing group of women and men in our global economy - live precariously as aliens in stated which do not acknowledge their claims to basic security and services.

Topics here include the tension between cultural sensitivity and universal concepts of rights; reinterpretations of citizenship in communities where the state has failed to guarantee political or economic rights; and projects which are helping to advance citizenship by increasing people's vioce in decision making.




CONTENTS

  • Editorial
    Caroline Sweetman

  • Women in Ugandan local government: the impact os affirmative action
    Deb Johnson with Hope Kabuchu and Santa Vusiya Kayonga

  • Citizenship degraded: Indian women in a modern state and a pre-modern society
    Kanchan Sinha

  • Algerian women, citizenship, and the 'Family Code'
    Zahia Smail Salhi

  • New forms of citizenship: democracy, family, and community in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    Joanna S. Wheeler

  • Creating citizens who demand just governance: gender and development in the tewnty-first century
    Maitrayee Mukhopadhyay

  • Fragmented feminisms: women's organisations and citizenship in 'transition' in Poland
    Angela Coyle

  • Gender, citizenship, and nationality in the Arab region
    Lina Abou-Habib

  • Deprived of an individual identity: citizenship and women in Nepal
    Mona Laczo

  • Women and citizenship in global teacher education: the Global-ITE project
    Jayashee Inbaraj, Subbalakshmi Kumar, Hellen Sambili, and Alison Scott-Baumann

  • Resources
    Compiled by Lina Abou-Habib with Erin Leigh

  • Publications

  • Journals

  • Training manuals and briefing papers

  • Electronic resources

  • Websites

  • Organisations


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