ABSTRACT

Engendering Development demonstrates how gender is a form of inequality that is used to generate global capitalist development. It charts the histories of gender, race, class, sexuality and nationality as categories of inequality under imperialism, which continue to support the accumulation of capital in the global economy today.

The textbook draws on feminist and critical development scholarship to provide insightful ways of understanding and critiquing capitalist economic trajectories by focusing on the way development is enacted and protested by men and women. It incorporates analyses of the lived experiences in the global north and south in place-specific ways. Taking a broad perspective on development, Engendering Development draws on textured case studies from the authors’ research and the work of geographers and feminist scholars. The cases demonstrate how gendered, raced and classed subjects have been enrolled in global capitalism, and how individuals and communities resist, embrace and rework development efforts. This textbook starts from an understanding of development as global capitalism that perpetuates and benefits from gendered, raced and classed hierarchies.

The book will prove to be useful to advanced undergraduate and graduate students enrolled in courses on development through its critical approach to development conveyed with straightforward arguments, detailed case studies, accessible writing and a problem-solving approach based on lived experiences.

part I|48 pages

Understanding development and inequality

chapter 1|16 pages

Understanding development and inequality

chapter 2|16 pages

Engendering development

chapter 3|14 pages

The business of international development

part II|43 pages

Processes in development

chapter 4|15 pages

Development as dispossession

chapter 5|15 pages

Labor, migration and capital accumulation

chapter 6|11 pages

Work, mobility and uneven development

part III|59 pages

Moments in development

chapter 7|17 pages

Health and population

chapter 8|15 pages

Gender and development technologies

chapter 9|14 pages

Disaster assistance and development

chapter 10|11 pages

Alternative development and decolonization