Gender justice: the World Bank's new approach
to the poor?
Gender justice: the World Bank's new approach
to the poor?
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Date
2007
Authors
Schech, Susanne Barbara
Vas Dev, Sanjugta
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
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Abstract
Gender inequality is now widely acknowledged as an important factor in the spread and entrenchment of poverty. This article examines the World Development Report 2000/01 as the World Bank's blueprint for addressing poverty in the twenty-first century, together with several more recent Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), with a view to analysing the manner in which gender is incorporated into the policy-making process and considering whether it constitutes a new approach to gender and poverty. It is argued that the World Bank's approach to poverty is unlikely to deliver gender justice, because there remain large discrepancies between the economic and social policies that it prescribes. More specifically, the authors contend that the Bank employs an integrationist approach which encapsulates gender issues within existing development paradigms without attempting to transform an overall development agenda whose ultimate objective is economic growth as opposed to equity. Case studies from Cambodia and Vietnam are used to illustrate these arguments.
Description
Keywords
Aid,
Governance and Public Policy,
Gender and Diversity,
Methods,
East Asia,
South Asia
Citation
Schech, S.B. & Vas Dev, S., 2007.
Gender justice: the World Bank's new approach to the poor?. Development in
Practice, 17(1), 14-26.