Monthly Corner

Laura Hughston - Blog

Arnoux Mouafo Nopi & Dimitri Tsona Zapzi - Article 

Prof. Wangari Mwai and Prof. Catherine Ndungo - BOOK

  • Understanding Gender and Identity Through The Gender Dictionary

    Publisher: Bleeding Ink Scribes

RAI SENGUPTA - gender-transformative evaluation tools

This synthesis draws on evidence from 17 humanitarian evaluations across diverse crisis settings. It identifies key feminist evaluation innovations across four domains - design, methods, analysis, and ethics - illustrating how feminist principles can be embedded throughout the evaluation process. It also surfaces broader shifts required at policy, institutional, and practice levels to realise the transformative potential of feminist approaches in humanitarian contexts.

The toolkit translates these insights into applied guidance for evaluators and organisations. It provides step-by-step support across the full evaluation cycle, including planning, design, methods, analysis, ethics, and dissemination. Drawing on global feminist evaluation practice, humanitarian guidance, and gender evaluation standards, it includes adaptable tools, participatory and arts-based methods, guiding questions, and templates for field application.

Ritu Dewan & Swat Raju - Article

  • Economy and Inequality

    In Promises & Reality 2026 Citizen’s Review of Year 2 of the NDA-III Government. Coordinated by Wada Na Todo Abhiyan, June 20, 2026. pp 94-100.

UTTHAN - Research Report

Traversing the path with women farmers in their fields and in our reflections/writings, a stark observation was the sheer lack of localized and regional vocabulary and terminology to adequately capture and communicate the understanding of climate change and mitigation strategies, informed by the unique experiences and needs of small and marginal women farmers. This is what propelled our research - to examine how women farmers perceive, express, experience, and respond to climate variability across

Our Research Report centres the lived experiences, generational knowledge, and resilience strategies of small and marginal women farmers from the coastal (Bhavnagar) and hilly (Dahod & Panchmahal) regions i.e two contrasting agro-climatic zones of Gujarat. Through their voices, the study reveals exactly how climate change intersects with gender, land rights, labour burdens, and food security.

Vacancies

INCLUDOVATE -  Call for Researchers, Pacific Focus

About the job

At Includovate, we are expanding our Pacific Research & Evaluation Talent Pool and inviting researchers, evaluators, consultants, and development practitioners to join a growing network of professionals committed to creating meaningful social impact.

As a feminist research incubator and certified social enterprise, Includovate works with partners including UNICEF, UNFPA, the ILO, governments, and development organisations across 23+ countries. Our work spans gender equality, social inclusion, health, disability, youth, climate, WASH, market systems, and other development priorities.

We are particularly keen to connect with experts from:
📍 Papua New Guinea
📍 Solomon Islands
📍 Vanuatu
📍 Timor-Leste
📍 Fiji
📍 Samoa
📍 Tonga
📍 Indonesia
📍 Australia
and across the wider Pacific region.

We welcome expertise in:
✓ Research, Monitoring, Evaluation & Learning
✓ Gender Equality & Social Inclusion
✓ Health & SRHR
✓ Disability Inclusion
✓ Youth Development
✓ Climate & Environment
✓ WASH
✓ Market Systems Development
✓ Governance & Community Development

Whether your expertise lies in data collection, research, evaluation, technical advisory, facilitation, or team leadership, we would love to hear from you.
By joining our Talent Pool, you become part of a trusted network of professionals who may be considered for future research, evaluation, advisory, and consulting opportunities across the Pacific region and beyond.

🔗 Register here: https://lnkd.in/eyF66S7H

Looking back and looking ahead: Reflections on three decades of gender and development

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/looking-back-ahead-reflections-three...


Looking back and looking ahead: Reflections on three decades of gender and development


January 2, 2024

I have working in the field of gender and development for three decades. This note reflects on what I believe has changed in this field over the three decades and some of the dilemmas I face.

Though passionate about gender equality since I was a teenager, it is only in the early 1990s that I gained clarity that gender relations were power relations, not just a product of ‘smooth’ socialization (Whitehead, 1979). I learnt that gender relations interact with social (power) relations of race, age, caste, class, religion, headship, marital status etc.  This learning synched with my experience of how in some dominant caste households in India, the women domestic helps used to enter from behind the house to work, using another entrance. I understood that institutions shape gender relations, that is how households, community, markets, and the state were shaping gendered power relations (Kabeer, 1994).  The human rights instrument, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against women, 1979, was used by women's groups then to hold government to account on gender equality. The Convention also refers to need for pro women pro poor and rights based development model.   Now, in 2020s,  it is the Sustainable Development Goal 5 which is used to assess progress on gender equality, and the indicators and targets do not adequately capture changes in power relations, institutional change and intersectionality (discussed in coming para) or development model. A human rights approach of rights holders holding duty bearers to account is missing.

The concept of intersectionality entered development discourse more recently, though the idea was put forth sharply by Allen (1991) few decades earlier in the context of black women’s experience of discrimination, which was distinct from that of white women and black men. More sharply than the concept of social relations, the concept of intersectionality brought out the “uniqueness” of experience of discrimination women at the intersections of different marginalized identities.  Yet, even today the concept of intersectionality is reduced to gender and social inclusion or gender and diversity, to say that the organizations work with women and people from a specific marginalized identity.

Bernstein (1992) observes that for lesbian and gay movements, which have always existed, goals include (but are not limited to) challenging dominant constructions of masculinity and femininity, homophobia, and the primacy of the gendered heterosexual nuclear family (heteronormativity). The term Queer is an umbrella term for people who are not heterosexual or are not cisgender, it includes lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transwomen, transmen etc.  Mainstream development discourse, still refers to sex and gender as binary. At the other end there has been a trend in social movements, to look at the queer as an undivided category, and not look at Dalit, minority or differently abled amongst queer.

When I started three decades ago, I (and many others in the movement) was rooted in socialist feminist thinking looking at interactions between patriarchy (the base on which other 'isms' followed), capitalism (and other hierarchies like casteism) etc. Today, we talk of feminism as a homogenous vision and movement. To cope with my lack of comfort with the homogeneous category “feminism,” I use the term challenging Kyriarchy, translated through gender/social relations transformative development.  The word Kyriarchy was coined by Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza in 1992 to describe her theory of interconnected, systems of domination and submission, in which a single individual might be oppressed in some “ism”  and privileged in others. Kyriarchy, encompasses, sexism, racism, capitalism, ableism, ageism, Islamophobia, homophobia, transphobia, colonialism, militarism, ethnocentrism (Kwok Puilan, 2002)

The concepts of kyriarchy and intersectionality challenges the simplistic notion that men and masculinities alone are the problem in women’s subordination or that dominant caste/race women are altruistic in their relations with women workers of color/Dalit women. It is important to examine how gender/social relations and hierarchical structures play out in real life, and build theory and action based on that, rather than other way around!

References

Allen, Kimberley, 1991, Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color, in Stanford Law Review, Vol. 43, No. 6 (Jul., 1991), pp. 1241-1299 (59 pages)

Bernstein, Mary (2002). "Identities and Politics: Toward a Historical Understanding of the Lesbian and Gay Movement". Social Science History. 26 (3): 531–581

Kabeer, N, 1994, Reversed Realities: Gender Hierarchies in Development Thought, Verso, UK

Kwok Pui-lan (2009). "Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza and Postcolonial Studies". Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. Indiana University Press. 25 (1): 191–197

Whitehead, Ann 1979, Some Preliminary Notes on the Subordination of Women, IDS Bulletin, Volume 10, Issue, 3,  April 1979, Pages 10-13

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