of the International Development Ethics Association
Gender Justice and Developlment: Local and Global
Bryn Mawr College
June 9-11, 2011
Organizers:
The International Development Ethics Association (IDEA)
Centre on Values and Ethics (COVE), Carleton University (Ottawa, Canada) Center for International Studies (CIS), Bryn Mawr College (Bryn Mawr, PA) Department of Philosophy, Bryn Mawr College (Bryn Mawr, PA)
Professorial Fellow, Institute of Development Studies, Sussex
Senior Research Fellow, Department of International Development, UK
Many organizations at the local, national, and global levels now understand gender to be a central factor in policies for alleviating poverty or promoting economic growth. The changes wrought by measures such as improving health care for women and children and increasing women’s access to education, property, and work show the key role that women can play in development processes. Moreover, these processes help to remove discrimination on the basis of gender and to alleviate the inequalities and injustices that discriminatory practices and traditions produce.
Scholars and activists in development are increasingly using the concept “gender justice” to replace the terms “gender equality” and “gender mainstreaming”. Many now hold that describing situations using the latter terms fails to address adequately the ongoing gender-based injustices from which women suffer. However, there is no single definition of gender justice and much disagreement among local, national, and international power-holders about what constitutes gender injustice and how to alleviate or eliminate it.
IDEA invites submissions that could include discussions of gender as it relates to any of the following list of topics.
Gender and...
• concepts of agency, empowerment, freedom, autonomy
• concepts of democracy, citizenship, constitutionalism
• concepts of the law, judicial reform, access to justice
• intersections of race, class, ethnicity, other factors of discrimination
• intersections of local/national and global
• economic globalization, global economy, markets, labor
• the family, community, nation, global
• reproductive health, health care, population
• education, religion, culture
• concepts of poverty, measuring inequalities
• the environment, climate change, public health
• feminisms, movements, activism
• post-colonialism, imperialism, transnationalism
• power, knowledge, institutional structures
• care ethics, values and ethics in general
• migration, global in the local
• violence, conflict, war, terrorism
• Human Development Reports, Millennium Development Goals, measurements, standards
• local, national, and global institutions and NGOs
Submission of Abstracts:
Proposals should be submitted by email to Christine Koggel at ckoggel@brynmawr.edu and should include:
1. An abstract of 500 words
2. Name, affiliation, and contact information on a separate page
3. A biography of under 100 words (for the conference program)
The conference will be conducted primarily in English. There may be some presentations in Spanish, depending on the availability of volunteers to give informal translations. Proposals for presentations in Spanish should be sent to Daniela Gallegos at danielagallegos@yahoo.com.
Important dates:
• December 17, 2010: deadline for proposals
• February 18, 2011: notification of acceptance
• May 1, 2011: deadline for submission of complete papers
Program Co-Chairs:
Jay Drydyk (Philosophy Chair, President of IDEA, Director of COVE, Carleton University)
Christine Koggel (Philosophy Chair, Co-Director of CIS, Board Member of IDEA, Bryn Mawr College)