Public policy at work: A feminist critique of global economic development

Similar documents
Women s Leadership for Global Justice

Commission on the Status of Women Fifty-fourth session New York, 1-12 March 2010 INTERACTIVE EXPERT PANEL

Recalling the outcomes of the World Summit for Social Development 1 and the twenty-fourth special session of the General Assembly, 2

Eradication of poverty and other development issues: women in development

ADDRESSING ECONOMIC INEQUALITY IN INDIA January 8 th -9 th, 2015

Civil Society Declaration 2016

Gender, labour and a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all

BRIEF POLICY. Mediterranean Interfaces: Agriculture, Rural Development and Migration

FEminist europe TOGETHER FOR A STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK EUROPEAN WOMEN S LOBBY

Draft declaration on the right to international solidarity a

GENDER ISSUES IN SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA:

FROM WOMEN IN DEVELOPMENT TO GENDER AND TRADE THE HISTORY OF THE GLOBAL WOMEN S PROJECT

Adelaide Recommendations on Healthy Public Policy

Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, Volume 24, Number 2, 2012, pp (Review)

Economic Globalization and the Free Market Ethos: A Gender Perspective.

Maureen Molloy and Wendy Larner

Human Rights Council. Resolution 7/14. The right to food. The Human Rights Council,

Sri Lanka National Consultation on the Global Forum on Migration and Development

Development Strategy for Gender Equality and Women s Empowerment

Criteria and Guidelines for Submission of Project Concept Notes: SAT/CFP1-3/2005

INTRODUCTION Q: What gender stereotypes, norms and roles do you find in your society?

EIGHTY-SIXTH SESSION WORKSHOPS FOR POLICY MAKERS: REPORT CAPACITY-BUILDING IN MIGRATION MANAGEMENT

Mexico City 7 February 2014

Governing Body 334th Session, Geneva, 25 October 8 November 2018

Solutions for Environment, Economy, and Democracy (SEED): A Manifesto for Prosperity

10 th AFRICAN UNION GENDER PRE-SUMMIT

TOWARDS A JUST ECONOMIC ORDER

Report Template for EU Events at EXPO

Feminist Critique of Joseph Stiglitz s Approach to the Problems of Global Capitalism

II BRIC Summit - Joint Statement April 16, 2010

10 th Southern Africa Civil Society Forum (27th-30th July 2014, Harare, Zimbabwe)

Plurilateralism and the Global South. --Kamal Mitra Chenoy *

Civil Society Priority Policy Points. G7 Sherpa Meeting

Diversity and Democratization in Bolivia:

PRE-CONFERENCE MEETING Women in Local Authorities Leadership Positions: Approaches to Democracy, Participation, Local Development and Peace

The Way Forward: Pathways toward Transformative Change

Resolution 2008/1 Population distribution, urbanization, internal migration and development

Shared responsibility, shared humanity

Women and Economic Empowerment in the Arab Transitions. Beirut, May th, Elena Salgado Former Deputy Prime Minister of Spain

Joel Westheimer Teachers College Press pp. 121 ISBN:

World Vision International. World Vision is advancing just cities for children. By Joyati Das

Lecture 1. Introduction

Community Voices on Causes and Solutions of the Human Rights Crisis in the United States

Action for Global Justice

International Council on Social Welfare Global Programme 2016 to The Global Programme for is shaped by four considerations:

International Conference o n. Social Protection. in contexts of. Fragility & Forced Displacement. Brussels September, 2017.

Executive summary. Strong records of economic growth in the Asia-Pacific region have benefited many workers.

CONSERVATISM: A DEFENCE FOR THE PRIVILEGED AND PROSPEROUS?

POLICY BRIEF No. 5. Policy Brief No. 5: Mainstreaming Migration into Development Planning from a Gender

Athens Declaration for Healthy Cities

REPORT BY THE INTERGOVERNMENTAL COUNCIL ON THE ACTIVITIES OF THE MANAGEMENT OF SOCIAL TRANSFORMATIONS (MOST) PROGRAMME IN OUTLINE

Asia as Global factory. Is the 21 st Century - Asian Century? OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY IN ASIA. Hazards Campaign Conference July 29-31, 2016

Proposal for Sida funding of a program on Poverty, Inequality and Social Exclusion in Africa

Re-imagining Human Rights Practice Through the City: A Case Study of York (UK) by Paul Gready, Emily Graham, Eric Hoddy and Rachel Pennington 1

OF THE REPUBLIC OF ZIMBABWE TO THE

Connections: UK and global poverty

ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT FOR WOMEN IN THE INFORMAL ECONOMY IN THAILAND. Poonsap S. Tulaphan

Vision for a Better World: From Economic Crisis to Equality

Women s economic empowerment in the changing world of work

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 22 December [on the report of the Second Committee (A/70/476/Add.2)] 70/219. Women in development

Ministerial declaration of the 2007 High-level Segment

UNAR Social, Humanitarian, and Cultural Committee. Committee Overview

FROM MEXICO TO BEIJING: A New Paradigm

Introduction: making global trade governance work for development

Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016

2011 HIGH LEVEL MEETING ON YOUTH General Assembly United Nations New York July 2011

Helen Clark: Opening Address to the International Conference on the Emergence of Africa

Feed the Future. Civil Society Action Plan

CIVIL SOCIETY DECLARATION

Just Transition Forum, February 26-28, 2018

Regional Social Protection Developments

Journal of Conflict Transformation & Security

16827/14 YML/ik 1 DG C 1

SOCIAL CHARTER OF THE AMERICAS. (Adopted at the second plenary session, held on June 4, 2012, and reviewed by the Style Committee)

Globalization, Labour Market Developments and Poverty

Security Council Unanimously Adopts Resolution 2282 (2016) on Review of United Nations Peacebuilding Architecture

PEACEBUILDING: APPROACHES TO SOCIAL

Report on 56th session of the United Nations General Assembly Second Committee

EAST AFRICAN SUB-REGIONAL SUPPORT INITIATIVE FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF WOMEN-EASSI

Cry out as if you have a million voices, for it is silence which kills the world. Catherine of Siena. The Journey to Rio+20

CONTRIBUTION TO THE THIRTEENTH COORDINATION MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 1. Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur

Global Financial Crisis Implications for NGOs Working on EFA. The Asia- Pacific Regional Report

Special edition, March 2009

Contributions to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development

STAMENT BY WORLD VISION International Dialogue on Migration Session 3: Rethinking partnership frameworks for achieving the migrationrelated

Embracing degrowth and post-development will allow NGOs to engage with grassroots movements Sophia Munro

MECHELEN DECLARATION ON CITIES AND MIGRATION

Closing Speech by Commissioner Christos Stylianides Annual Conference of the European Commission Humanitarian Aid Partners 26 November, 2014

and corrigendum (E/2005/27 and Corr.1), chap. I.A. 2 See General Assembly resolution 60/1.

Selecting a topic and methodology for gender politics of policy research

Economic and Social Council

Living Together in a Sustainable Europe. Museums Working for Social Cohesion

Major Group Position Paper

Jürgen Kohl March 2011

YES WORKPLAN Introduction

SDGs 1 (poverty) and 10 (inequality): case studies and policy implications. Elena Danilova-Cross Programme Specialist Istanbul Regional Hub

Recognizing Community Contributions for Achieving SDGs in Nepal Federation of Community Forestry Users Nepal (FECOFUN)

The 1st. and most important component involves Students:

Adopted by the Security Council at its 7317th meeting, on 20 November 2014

Ethiopia Hotspot. Operating context

Transcription:

the author(s) 2015 ISSN 1473-2866 (Online) ISSN 2052-1499 (Print) www.ephemerajournal.org volume 15(3): 689-695 Public policy at work: A feminist critique of global economic development Jessica L. Rich review of Jain, D. and D. Elson (eds.) (2011) Harvesting feminist knowledge for public policy: Rebuilding progress. New Delhi: Sage Publications India. (HB, pp. 396, $55.00, ISBN 9788132107415) Harvesting feminist knowledge for public policy addresses gender and socioeconomic inequalities spurred by the 2008-2009 economic downturn and exacerbated by increases in food prices as well as shortages, access to fuel, and financial failures of the state and banking industries. The book project is a product of the 2000 Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action as well as eleven years of discussion among feminist thinkers envisioning alternative futures with goals of social and economic justice. Forwarding a critique of market economies, Harvesting feminist knowledge challenges the concept that growth is the key to development while arguing for policies that promote a more socially-just economy. The collection offers a breadth of justice-oriented solutions beyond policy reform. Through the lens of feminist and economic development theories, the authors argue that current solutions to global economic crises encourage growth to the detriment of poor communities across the world, with the attendant physical, social and economic violence against the women who reside in them. Of particular interest to gender and organization studies scholars, the book emphasizes the problematic of informal and unpaid work, the role of the state in economic development, and the potential impact of women-led movements. Together, the authors outline an agenda of grassroots mobilization, review 689

ephemera: theory & politics in organization 15(3): 689-695 collective action, and a reimagining of alternatives for a more socially-just world. Harvesting feminist knowledge moves from discussions of policy reform to more radical questions of capital and gender as the authors envision future possibilities. The discussion begins with a redefinition of the concept of work, challenging current economic policies and their treatment of informal work, in particular. Chapters by Jain, Benería, Collas-Monsod, Jhabvala, and Otobe address the lack of attention to women s informal work in public policy. Collas-Monsod, for example, pushes for the removal of the cloak of invisibility by policy-makers with the inclusion of time-use data in GDP estimations, as well as the recognition of the impact that housework, family care and voluntary service work have on a nation s economy (93). Castañeda and Grammage s chapter, Gender, global crises and climate change, and Fall s chapter, The cost of the commoditization of food and water for women, extend the problem of work further by adding environmental crises into the equation. The physical and mental health of families and communities will continue to be stressed by consequences resulting from climate change, with increased pressure on the informal work that women contribute. The chapters by Castañeda and Grammage, and Falls, suggest policy solutions that privilege local knowledge and that value human rights to natural resources in the face of oncoming, environmental crises. Complicating the efforts to create more inclusive policy, however, is the necessity of the state s involvement in policy development, a critique of which is largely missing until the end of the text. The final chapters raise questions of power, ideology and masculinity, as well as the complexities of looking to the state as provider of rights, especially in a post-colonial, global economic climate that favors neoliberal policies. For example, policy-makers at the state level must recognize informal work through processes that require a transformed valuation of unpaid labour. As McFadden observes in her chapter on the challenges of feminist movements in Africa, our assumptions about the state and our understandings of class and the practices that accompany privilege and power urgently require closer and more radical scrutiny (294). According to McFadden, women s movements must recognize the inequities produced by capitalism if they are to create real change. The first two chapters of Harvesting feminist knowledge approach economic policy through reform, focusing on a human development approach and challenging neoliberal economic systems. Elson asserts that policy-makers must put social justice first by focusing on human rights rather than economic markets. Especially in a post-crisis world, Elson s approach offers directions that privilege the human over profit and that invest in the cooperative efforts of communities, including those that involve unpaid labour most often contributed by women. 690 review

Jessica L. Rich Public policy at work Socially-just economies, for Elson, recognize gender equality as a significant goal and require social investment in public goods and services, such as education and health. Seguino also focuses on policy reform in the chapter Rebooting is not an option: Toward equitable social and economic development. Seguino offers a vision for policy that challenges neoliberal goals of market deregulation and short-term economic growth and suggests strategies that promote long-term subsidies for small business and agricultural endeavors, regulation of central banks, and currency transaction tax (CTT) that can be used to generate social insurance if future crises arise. The state becomes especially important for Elson and for Seguino, both of whom look to government processes to seek reform rather than an upheaval of policy-producing systems. Like Elson and Seguino, the authors in later chapters of Harvesting feminist knowledge recognize the role of market liberalization in rising social, political and economic inequality among women and men across the globe. Here, the book moves toward a provocative question: how might informal labour practices be counted in economic policy? These authors assert the necessity of recognizing the informal labour of women as significant in a nation s economic health. Jain turns to a case study of India in her discussion of hunger and economic success, emphasizing poverty as a gendered experience that men and women suffer differently. A nation s economic growth, Jain asserts, does not equal food security or nutrition for all; rather, the rich get hungrier (Jain, 2011: 51; Sen, 2010). As corporate farms replace subsistence farms, women are impacted the most due to their role in supplying and preparing food for their families, often having to travel farther to find fuel and resources, such as water. Benería also observes the importance of informal labour, however, she provides evidence of a global move toward informalization of all labour through subcontracting, homework production of goods and other precarious work. She notes in her chapter on Globalization, labor and women s work that the largest proportion of informal work involves poor women in developing countries, who often leave their own families to care for the children of the wealthy and middle class in developed countries. Collas-Monsod s chapter, Removing the cloak of invisibility, recalls past efforts by the United Nations to calculate informal and unpaid work, as part of a country s national income. She highlights the case of the Philippines, in which gender-sensitive data were included in income measures. These data show that GDP in the Philippines increased by up to 40% from 1990-1998 with the inclusion of unpaid work. Collas-Monsod also cites findings from the Philippines case that women contribute approximately 71-73% of total unpaid hours when they are employed and up to 91% for women who are not involved in the formal, paid workforce (104). Jhabvala returns to India to address informal work in her chapter Poor women organizing for economic justice. The author follows a powerful women s trade union in India, the Self-Employed Women s review 691

ephemera: theory & politics in organization 15(3): 689-695 Association, which organizes and studies the collective efforts of women workers. Jhabvala concludes that organizing informal workers is necessary, as is the inclusion of their voices in representative bodies at the regional, national and international levels. Otobe follows Jhabvala with a discussion of the International Labour Organization s decent work policy, which asserts that rights, productive employment, social protections and dialogue about labour and work are necessary for poverty reduction. Otobe takes a similar stance as the other authors in her call for women s unpaid work to be a part of any intervention into decent work policies. Castañeda and Grammage extend the work of the previously mentioned authors with their focus on climate change as a factor that will impede unpaid work and also strike the most vulnerable, namely women, who predominantly participate in informal labour. Fall, too, speaks to the problem of commoditization of food and water services, which impacts women who, in the face of scarcity, are required to maintain care-taking responsibilities on less or travel farther in sometimes dangerous conditions in order to procure provisions for their families. United Nations climate change reports marginalize gender, according to Castañeda and Grammage. The authors recommend investment in policies that work toward gender equality. Women, for example, are often excluded from decision-making bodies or not considered to be stakeholders in resource management. Most important, Castañeda and Grammage suggest not only attention to gender relations, but also to differentiated gendered experiences, to the dangers of essentializing men and women based on biology, and to seeing local community members as actors rather than as passive respondents to change. Privileging local knowledge can inform policies that attend to resource scarcity and inform policy-makers of the impact that it, and other consequences such as malnutrition, disease and trauma, places on local communities. The solutions offered by many of the authors suggest a common thread: that unpaid and informal work be included in economic policy. By employing the concept of bubbling up, as opposed to trickle down, authors challenge policymakers to focus on women first and emphasize the importance of women organizing at the local, grassroots level in order to create broader economic change. Economic policy, the authors state time and again, must account for unpaid work. Jain s solution, for example, is to empower women to reclaim democracy and development at the local level and then to build solidarity more broadly. For Benería, improving labour conditions is necessary for women s situation to improve, as is refining policies that currently export women s labour at the cost of fragmenting their own families for the sake of capital. Collas- Monsod points to the UN s System of National Accounts (SNA), which continues to exclude unpaid activities as part of a nation s income. Adding to the support 692 review

Jessica L. Rich Public policy at work for women s movements, Silliman, in the last chapter, calls for women s groups to embrace progressive masculinities and to challenge the gender binary that divides women s and men s groups as both strive for equality. While the authors support the inclusion of unpaid work in policy, few question the cultural and political structures that will push back on these efforts. Collas-Monsod, for example, states that the SNA relented in their efforts to count unpaid work in national statistics due to a lack of demand on the part of nations policy-makers and the desire to uphold the status quo that keeps women s unpaid work invisible and exploitable. Without further critique of the state, in their present, neoliberal form, the arguments made for policy change will be difficult to achieve. Throughout the discussions of unpaid work, arguments suggesting that public policy is the key to women s advancement are constrained because these policies must be recognized by power that rests with the state and the ideologies of those who continue to operate it. The State, and the corporate interests embedded in it, remains unexplained in Harvesting feminist knowledge. What is the State s role in change? How might change be hindered at local, national and international levels if policy-makers refuse to recognize unpaid work or women s well-being as significant to broader economic policies? For example, while Jhabvala recognizes the significance of organizing poor women toward economic justice, she admits that scaling up is necessary for broader impact and also that efforts rely on both State and transitory corporate interests in order to succeed. Small groups lose power as larger organizational bodies usurp them. The State s cooperation, then, is necessary in maintaining women s voices beyond grassroots organizing. Climate change policies, too, are dependent on wider national efforts of developed countries to regulate emissions. While the authors offer productive solutions, the problem of the paternalism, patriarchy and neoliberal policies maintained at the state level continues to plague promising outcomes. Wendy Brown, in her book States of injury: Power and freedom in late modernity (1995), may provide a productive approach to a public policy-based critique of the State. Brown asserts that the State has replaced the man in women s lives, offering welfare and care in place of husbands and fathers. Further, Brown (1995: 11) recognizes the role of neoliberal policies, stating that in the 1970s, as the Right promulgated an increasingly narrow and predominantly economic formulation of freedom and claimed freedom s ground as its own, liberals and leftists lined up behind an equally narrow and predominantly economic formulation of equality. Groups who are interested in progressive social change, therefore, must question the State s role as provider of rights and critique the wounds that political groups maintain as sites of identity in their struggle to gain rights and recognition by the State. While arguments within Harvesting review 693

ephemera: theory & politics in organization 15(3): 689-695 feminist knowledge envision a more socially-just future, they run up against political bodies that reaffirm women s identities as wounded and in need of the State to rectify past wrongs. Brown, on the other hand, suggests a postindividualist conceptualization of freedom that moves from identities garnered from injuries of the past ( who I am ) toward forward-looking, collective futures ( what I want for us ) (51). Through a critical perspective of the political and the State, policy becomes less of a striving to possess rights that are kept out of the hands of women and more of a demand to redefine work and the value that the State places on the informal work of women. There are moments in Harvesting feminist knowledge that open up a critique of the State and that strengthen the discussion of informal and unpaid work. Seguino, for example, claims that the focus of policy should be on the social rather than on the state, which she contends is controlled by exclusive groups of officials (15). Fall, too, offers examples from Tanzania, Bolivia and Ghana, in which communities grassroots efforts successfully challenged State efforts to privatize water systems to the detriment of their people. Further, McFadden s chapter on African feminism offers a particularly strong critique of capitalism and power, stating that women in Africa have been homogenized as breeders for colonial capitalism kept outside any direct relationship with the state and/or public institutions (297). Citing the case of Zimbabwe, McFadden recognizes that women s organizations have been recognized only if they are able to operationalize the neocolonial policies of the state. These organizations have been absorbed through discourses that maintain Africa as dependent on the West, particularly through women s NGOs, which can problematically reify neoliberal structures. McFadden suggests that a period of introspection is necessary for feminists. She also asserts that feminists should trace the conjunctures in which radical changes occurred for women, in order to retrieve feminist history for the present (302). McFadden s directions align with Brown s assertions: that a challenge to the contemporary, neoliberal State must involve a critical perspective, and introspection, that recognizes the co-productive processes of power and capital through which policy is determined. In conclusion, Harvesting feminist knowledge provocatively challenges policymakers to question conceptions of work and opens possibilities for public policy through redefinition. Scholars and practitioners of public policy, development studies, organization studies, and gender studies will find encouragement in the suggestions made by the contributors to this book. Public policy is one means through which social change can, indeed, bubble up. As reiterated by the authors, however, women s labour all too often is unpaid and made invisible. Harvesting feminist knowledge offers a detailed critique of specific policies that, if maintained, will continue to marginalize women, at best. At worst, these policies, 694 review

Jessica L. Rich Public policy at work when left uncritiqued, produce outcomes that endanger the physical and mental well-being of women and the global communities in which they reside. references Brown, W. (1995) States of injury: Power and freedom in late modernity. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Jain, D. and D. Elson (eds.) (2011) Harvesting feminist knowledge for public policy: Rebuilding progress. New Delhi: Sage Publications India. Sen, A. (2010) The rich get hungrier, New York Times, 28 May. the author Jessica L. Rich is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Communication at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her research interests include critical organization studies and examining how work and labor are evolving in light of global environmental change. Email: jlrich@email.unc.edu review 695