ABSTRACT

With a global commitment to achieve gender equality by 2030, the SDGs present a historic opportunity to place gender as central to human progress across the globe. Gender equality, which requires the empowerment of all women and girls, is an explicit goal, in addition to being a fundamental prerequisite to and facilitator of most other SDGs. This edited collection provides a range of geographical and geospatial insights, from a variety of disciplinary and country-specific perspectives, to better understand gender and sustainable development. In addition to several African countries, Mexico, Japan, Canada, USA, and Cambodia are featured. A range of topical case studies examine women’s domestic and care work, including water collection, breastfeeding, food purchasing, and caring for elderly family members. Access to health care services is examined in the case of breast screening and antenatal care. Women’s engagement in the labour force is also addressed, with a specific look at the renewable energy sector; structural barriers to employment are discussed across a number of chapters, with clear strategies to break through these barriers. Finally, theoretical insights are proposed in better understanding and engaging in gendered inequalities in health.

chapter 1|16 pages

Gender matters globally

Geography, health, and sustainability

part 2|92 pages

Target 5.4

chapter 7|15 pages

Understanding women's unpaid work and domestic work

Using Photovoice to capture immigrant carer-employee experiences in southern Ontario, Canada

chapter 8|18 pages

Resource insecurity and gendered inequalities in health

A challenge to sustainable livelihood

chapter 9|16 pages

“Today men's orientation has changed”

Gender and household water and sanitation responsibilities in Ghana

chapter 10|20 pages

Canvas Totes and plastic bags

The political ecology of food assistance effectiveness at farmers' markets in the Twin Cities

part 3|74 pages

Target 5.6

chapter 14|15 pages

Event-history analysis of determinants of breastfeeding in Cambodia

Evidence from Demographic and Health Survey

chapter 15|7 pages

The world we want

The development we want