Read more
Gender Justice and Human Rights in International Development Assistance provides a critical analysis of how frameworks of gender equality play out in the field of international development assistance.
List of contents
Introduction
Part I
1. Breaking the waves
2. Wavering across the international normative architecture
Part II
3. Variations on the politics of gender equality
4. Universal nocturnes of injustices
Part III
5. Critical reframing of gender equality
About the author
Sarah Forti PhD is the founder and director of Critical Rights & Gender Consult based in Copenhagen, Denmark, and has more than 20 years of experience in Development evaluations, program design and training in the field of human rights, non-discrimination, women’s human rights and SGBV (Sexual and Gender-based Violence) across Africa, Latin America and Asia.
Summary
Gender Justice and Human Rights in International Development Assistance provides a critical analysis of how frameworks of gender equality play out in the field of international development assistance.
Additional text
"Based on extensive experience of the development industry in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, lawyer Sarah Forti argues here for the use of a Human Rights-Based Approach (HRBA) to gender work in the development field, offering students and practitioners in gender and international development a deeper understanding of gender equality." — Pauline Stoltz, Aalborg University, Denmark
"For those at the chalk face of international development assistance, Sarah Forti’s book will be indispensable. While it recognises and acknowledges the issues raised by cultural relativism it also seeks (successfully) to revivify the need for an acceptance of the universality of the inequality of women’s cultural and economic status, and the implications of this for useful gender development assistance." — Emeritus Professor Wade Mansell at Kent Law School, University of Kent, UK
"The author builds upon a wealth of experience in the field of international development assistance to highlight the universality of violations of women’s rights and rescue the concept of gender justice from discursive fragmentations stemming from cultural relativism and identity politics. An important book not only for development practitioners but for anyone interested in finding clear pathways through the maze of ideologies of gender equality and justice." —Patrick Thornberry, Emeritus Professor of International Law at Keele University, member of the (UN) Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, and former Chairman of Minority Rights Group, the international human rights NGO