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Special Issue on Gender and Citizenship
Taylor and Francis Group, 1997This special issue brings together some current theoretical debates on gender and citizenship in the climate of globalisation, including debates concerning the changing nature of people's individual and group identities and belonging.DocumentShifting Spaces: Women, Citizenship and Migration within the European Union
Polity Press, 1998This book is based on a research project examining the gender dimensions of internal migration in the European Union (EU). The impact of EU membership on the citizenship experience of female EU nationals as they migrate from one member country to another is explored.DocumentGender and Citizenship: Supporting Resources Collection
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2004Citizenship is an abstract concept and therefore great care must be taken in explaining what it means in practice and what can effectively be done in the context of development interventions and policy. Development projects which enhance the ability of marginalised groups to access and influence decision-making bodies are implicitly if not explicitly working with concepts of citizenship.DocumentGender and Citizenship: Overview Report
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2004Feminists and women's rights activists have sought to reframe citizenship from a gender perspective and to show how struggles for women's rights must be seen as citizenship struggles that affect everyone in society rather than ?minority interests?. This idea of citizenship has been used to tackle exclusion on the basis of gender, for example with political quotas and affirmative action.DocumentGender and Citizenship Cutting Edge Pack (CEP)
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2004There are those for whom citizenship is a site of achievement, of power and validation of their place in the world - a way of achieving positive change and gaining a better standard of living for all groups.DocumentGender and Citizenship: Learning from South Africa?
Agenda Feminist Publishing, 2001In what ways does political transformation mean a change in meanings and practice of citizenship - in the relationships between individuals and the state? This paper discusses the experiences of women, particularly black women, of citizenship in South Africa, where the new administration promised a new politics based on civil society and universal citizenship.DocumentGoverning for Equity, Gender, Citizenship and Governance
Royal Tropical Institute, 2003This publication comes out of the Gender, Citizenship and Governance programme of the Royal Tropical Institute (KIT), Netherlands. The project aimed to develop good practice in changing governance institutions to promote gender equality, enhance citizen participation and build accountability of public administration systems.DocumentPromoting Gender Equity in the Democratic Process: women's Paths to Political Participation and Decisionmaking
Centre for Development and Population Activities, 2000How can women be integrated in processes of democratisation? The participation of women in political and economic processes is essential for democratic governance. The PROWID grants system supported activities such as lobbying and advocacy, skills development and developing institutions to further women's social and economic rights.DocumentGender Analysis of Budgets as a Tool for Achieving Gender Equality in the Arab World
2002How can budgets become more gender-sensitive in the Arab region? This newsletter from the Economic Research Forum(ERF) highlights existing policy relevant research to assist governments, organisations and researchers to track, monitor and evaluate national and local public budgets from a gender and poverty perspective.DocumentGender Budgets and Beyond: Feminist Fiscal Policy in the Context of Globalisation
BRIDGE, 2003This article is part of a special issue of Oxfam's Gender and Development journal entitled Women Reinventing Globalisation, bringing together insights drawn from the Ninth International Forum of the Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID). It focuses on the gender-blindness of macro-economic and fiscal policies.Pages
