Gender, Development, and Marriage
Marriage is now acknowledged as an institution of key relevance to development policy, practice, and research. The vast majority of women and men get married at least once, and in many places life outside marriage is almost impossible for either sex to contemplate. Yet marriage experienced by men is very different from marriage for women. This is because marriage is, in all male-dominated societies, an institution imbues with inequality, in which husbands and fathers rule the roost. Many cultures and legal systems still permit the control and punishment of unruly wives, through violence ranging from genital mutilation to domestic beatings. Within marriage there exist clear roles for women and men to perform, as they create and maintain a family. The conventional assumption that these roles are natural and divinely ordained determines the inequality that prevails between men and women. It also helps to set the terms on which women participate in wider society, and colours perceptions of the political and economic contribution that they make. The collection of articles traces the economic and social impact of inequality in marriage on women, men, and wider society, and considers its implications for development. Topics include child marriage; the link between women’s economic contribution and equality within marriage; NGO responses to domestic violence; and the need to understand particular forms of marriage as prerequisite for appropriate development policy
Published: 2003
Pages: 102
eBook: 9780855987411
Paperback: 9780855985042
Editorial | |||
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Early female marriage in the developing world | |||
Rethinking culture and development: marriage and gender among the tea plantation workers in Sri Lanka | |||
Negotiating violence and non-violence in Cambodian marriages | |||
Early marriage and poverty: exploring links and key policy issues | |||
Marriage, development and the status of women in Kerala, India | |||
Child support as a strategic interest: la Asociacion de Madres Dermandantes of El Salvador | |||
Early marriage in esatern Nigeria and the health consequences of vesico-vaginal fistulae (VVF) among young mothers | |||
Marriage well being and agency among women | |||
Rethinking marriage and gender relations using evideence from the Pacific | |||
Resources |
Caroline Sweetman
Caroline Sweetman is Editor of the international journal Gender & Development and works for Oxfam GB.
Partner and Relationship Factors in Domestic Violence
Pandey, G.K.
Dutt, Debashis
Banerjee, Bratati
Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Vol. 24 (2009), Iss. 7 P.1175
https://doi.org/10.1177/0886260508322186 [Citations: 48]HIV/Aids in Women: Stigma and Gender Empowerment in Africa
Kalipeni, Ezekiel
Future HIV Therapy, Vol. 2 (2008), Iss. 2 P.147
https://doi.org/10.2217/17469600.2.2.147 [Citations: 5]