توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Gendered Face of COVID-19 in the Global South: The Development, Gender and Health Nexus
نام کتاب : The Gendered Face of COVID-19 in the Global South: The Development, Gender and Health Nexus
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : چهره جنسیتی Covid-19 در جنوب جهانی: توسعه ، جنسیت و سلامت.
سری :
نویسندگان : Jean Grugel, Matt Barlow, Tallulah Lines, Maria Eugenia Giraudo, Jessica Omukuti
ناشر : Bristol University Press
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 224
ISBN (شابک) : 9781529218855
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 11 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Front Cover\nThe Gendered Face of Covid-19 in the Global South\nCopyright information\nDedication\nTable of contents\nAbout the Authors\nAcknowledgments\nIntroduction: Derailing Development, Exacerbating Gender Injustice\n The crisis of global development\n Gender, health and development during and after COVID-19\n Scope, methods and coverage\nONE Gender, Development and COVID-19: More of the Same is Not Working\n Introduction\n Gender, intersectionality and development\n Why focus on women and girls?\n Development crises are gendered – COVID-19 is no exception\n COVID-19 policy responses: the risk of failing to protect and empower women\n Feminist political economy (FPE): the importance of understanding gendered violence and gendered depletion\n Is a feminist COVID-19 recovery possible?\n Conclusion\nTWO Unequal Development: What Lies Beneath COVID-19’s Gender Politics?\n Introduction\n Gendered vulnerabilities and the global political economy\n COVID-19 and the inequalities of access to finance\n The global economy: debt is burdening the most vulnerable during COVID-19\n The debt burden is not gender-neutral\n COVID-19’s development impact: gender and the wider Sustainable Development Goals\n Building back better inclusively\n Conclusion\nTHREE Regional Governance: A Missed Opportunity to Tackle COVID-19’s Gendered Inequalities?\n Introduction\n Regionalism in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa: what do regional organizations aspire to do in health crises?\n Gendering policy: what role for regional organizations?\n Regional responses to COVID-19: advocating for gendered policies, working with civil society, providing logistical support and (limited) financial help\n Advocacy and information\n Logistical and financial support\n Explaining the limited impact of effective regionalism for women’s rights during the pandemic\n Conclusion\nFOUR Exacerbating Inequalities: Gender-Based Violence and Sexual and Reproductive Health\n Introduction\n Gender-based violence before COVID-19\n Responding to COVID-19: calls for gender-based protections\n Sharp rises in gender-based violence in 2020: a crisis foretold\n Despite warnings and growing evidence, national policy response falls short\n Sexual and reproductive health: uneven provision even before COVID-19\n Pandemics increase sexual and reproductive health risks\n Girls and adolescents are especially vulnerable during COVID-19\n Migrant women and girls face extra risks and barriers to sexual and reproductive health2\n Reproductive needs and rights are not respected\n Historical gains for feminist activism\n Conclusion\nFIVE Exacerbating the Gender Gap: COVID-19 and Gendered Inequalities in Work and Education\n Introduction\n Precarious work and the gendered challenges of COVID-19\n Informal women workers\n Paid domestic workers\n Unpaid domestic and care work\n Government responses: how far have they protected vulnerable women workers?\n COVID-19: barriers to girls’ education\n Conclusion\nConclusion\n COVID-19 has exacerbated pre-existing inequalities and provoked new challenges\n None of this was a surprise\n What explains gender-inequitable policy responses to COVID-19?\n Where do we go from here?\n An eight-point plan to build back better for girls and women\nReferences\nIndex\nBack Cover