Fuente UNRISD / 1 de Enero de 2017
UNRISD research has both led and continually challenged the field of gender and development, contributing to feminist scholarship and activism, and bringing evidence to bear on the practice of development. Recent analysis of the gendered structure of social welfare regimes, and of the social and political economy of care, have shed light on how the unequal distribution of care work in the economy shapes gender and other inequalities. This work has elevated the issue of unpaid care on the global policy agenda, leading to its inclusion in the SDGs.
Gender equality is now a legitimate political claim at local, national and global levels. But despite progress and greater attention to some issues, such as violence against women, advances remain limited in others and reversals are frequent. Where women have gained voice through activism and increased political representation, this does not necessarily translate into substantive equality, or social and economic gains. Gender inequalities in resources, opportunities and power continue to be a persistent and integral feature of the modern world and its institutions.
For these reasons the UNRISD Gender and Development Programme focuses on the structures and relations that underpin gendered outcomes (and structure other inequalities), including the linkages between production and social reproduction, between economic and social policies, and between women’s movements and state institutions. The programme also focuses on the intersectionality of gender with factors such as age, class and ethnicity, leveraging its pioneering contributions and expanding the analysis of care policies in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Projects
Feminization, Agricultural Transition and Rural Employment (FATE)
Innovations and Challenges in Care
Feminist Analysis of Social and Solidarity Economy Practices: Views from Latin America and India
Gender Dimensions of Food and Water Security in Dryland Areas
Labour Markets and Social Policy: Gendered Connections