Contributing to ongoing debates about what happens when feminism is institutionalized in global governance, this article examines how gender equality is given meaning and applied in humanitarian aid to refugees, and what the implications are with regard to the production of subjectivities and their positioning in relations of power. Drawing on Foucauldian and postcolonial feminist perspectives, the analysis identifies two main representations of what it means to promote gender equality in refugee situations. Gender equality is represented as a means to aid effectiveness through the strategic mobilization of refugee women’s participation, and as a project of development, involving the transformation of “traditional” or “backward” refugee cul...
This paper explores the social construction of women refugees from the perspective of the human righ...
Women make up at least half of the world's refugees, but only a minority of asylum seekers who reach...
Global forced migration represents one of the largest international humanitarian crises which tradit...
Contributing to ongoing debates about what happens when feminism is institutionalized in global gove...
In recent decades, international feminist activism and research has had significant success in pushi...
In humanitarian aid policy and practice, the importance of women’s participation is strongly emphasi...
This article pursues critical gender analysis of conditions of non-governmental (NGO) assistance in ...
During displacement, women are more at risk and they face a number of challenges such as exposure to...
International humanitarian actors, such as non-governmental organisations (NGOs) ...
The importance of including men and boys in order to successfully promote gender equality has been i...
What would a gender analysis of refugee crises reveal if one expanded the focus beyond female refuge...
The catastrophic dimensions of humanitarian emergencies are increasingly understood and more visible...
In humanitarian aid to refugees, participatory and community-based approaches are today strongly emp...
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Executive Committee and the Refugee Women and Gend...
Abstract Humanitarian actors often face competing accountabilities that may skew “upw...
This paper explores the social construction of women refugees from the perspective of the human righ...
Women make up at least half of the world's refugees, but only a minority of asylum seekers who reach...
Global forced migration represents one of the largest international humanitarian crises which tradit...
Contributing to ongoing debates about what happens when feminism is institutionalized in global gove...
In recent decades, international feminist activism and research has had significant success in pushi...
In humanitarian aid policy and practice, the importance of women’s participation is strongly emphasi...
This article pursues critical gender analysis of conditions of non-governmental (NGO) assistance in ...
During displacement, women are more at risk and they face a number of challenges such as exposure to...
International humanitarian actors, such as non-governmental organisations (NGOs) ...
The importance of including men and boys in order to successfully promote gender equality has been i...
What would a gender analysis of refugee crises reveal if one expanded the focus beyond female refuge...
The catastrophic dimensions of humanitarian emergencies are increasingly understood and more visible...
In humanitarian aid to refugees, participatory and community-based approaches are today strongly emp...
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Executive Committee and the Refugee Women and Gend...
Abstract Humanitarian actors often face competing accountabilities that may skew “upw...
This paper explores the social construction of women refugees from the perspective of the human righ...
Women make up at least half of the world's refugees, but only a minority of asylum seekers who reach...
Global forced migration represents one of the largest international humanitarian crises which tradit...