Gender works : Oxfam experience in policy and practice
著者
書誌事項
Gender works : Oxfam experience in policy and practice
Oxfam GB, c1999
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注記
"An Oxfam Publication." -- on cover
Includes bibliographical references
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Based on a participatory process involving many Oxfam GB staff, Gender Works gives a multi-faceted account of the organisation's attempt to intergrate gender issues into its work and culture over the past 15 years. It is an important book for development poliy-makers and practitioners as well as academic researchers. The 36 contributers include women and men from all over the world who work for or with Oxfam GB and other national Oxfams. Individual articles are short and to the point, reflecting the personal experiences of both managers and community-level workers. They cover the challenges of implementing Oxfam's innovative gender policy: of promoting gender-aware development and emergency work; of influencing organisational culture and of working with the international women's movement to promote gender equality.
目次
- * Preface
- David Bryer
- * Introduction
- Fenella Porter, Ines Smyth, and Caroline Sweetman
- * Timeline
- 1. The challenges of implementation
- * Much ado about knitting: the experience of Bosfam (Bosnia)
- Usha Kar
- * Men in the kitchen, women in the office? Working on gender issues in Ethiopia
- Feleke Tadele
- * Gender concerns in emergencies
- Fiona Gell
- * Gender in times of war (El Salvador)
- Martha Thompson
- * Bringing it back home: Gender and poverty in the UK
- Geraldine Terry
- * Representative systems and accountability structures in refugee settlements in Ikafe, Uganda
- Judy Adoko
- * Mind the gap: How what we do differs from what we say (Burkina Faso)
- Alice Iddi
- * The spaces between the weave: Building alliances at the grassroots (Pakistan)
- Maryam Iqbal
- 1. Organisational culture and procedures
- * Changing the rules: Implementing a gender policy through organisational procedures
- Bridget Walker
- * Two steps forward, one step back: Experiences from Cambodia
- Visha Padmanabhan
- * Gender: Assessing the impact
- Elsa Dawson
- * A rose by any other name: Feminism in development NGOs
- Ines Smyth
- * Personal management in crisis: Experience from Afghanistan
- Sue Emmott
- * Rhetoric to reality: A psychological approach
- Wendy Carson
- * Setting up the Oxfam nursery
- The editors with thanks to Norman Clift
- 3. The role of a specialist team
- * Chronicle of a death fortold: The birth and death of Oxfam GB's Gender and Development Unit
- Suzanne Williams
- * GADU remembered: Some reflections on the early years
- Tina Wallace
- * Fairytales and feminism: Volunteering in the Gender Team
- Alison Farrell
- * Middle-aged man seeks gender team
- Chris Roche
- 4. Working at different levels
- * Regional cohesion and gender in the Middle East programme
- Lina Abu-Habib and Omar Traboulsi
- * The experience of Beijing from a Zambian perspective
- Lucy Muyoyeta
- * Women's Eyes on the World Bank: Intergrating gender equity into advocacy work
- Lydia Williams
- * Gender and diversity in Oxfam international
- Ellen Sprenger and Diane Biray Gregorio
- * Harmonising gender and development: The GAD fund in South Africa
- Penny Plowman and Josette Cole
- * Gender means doing things differently: Lessons from Oxfam's Women's Linking Project
- Candida March
- * Participation and management in Soutgh Asia:Gender transformation in the AGRA South network
- Kanchan Sinha
- 5. Building capacity
- * From the slipstream to the mainstream: Incorporating gender into The Oxfam Handbook of Development and Relief
- Deborah Eade
- * The 'cutting edge' of practice? Publishing, gender, and diversity in Oxfam GB
- Caroline Sweetman
- * Making visible the invisible: the work of the gender resource centre
- Sue Smith
- * A history of gender training in Oxfam
- Jan Seed
- * Academic reality: From theory to practice
- Rajni Khanna
- * Gender training for policy implementers: Only a partial solution
- Fenella Porter and Ines Smyth
- * Appendix: Gender and development - Oxfam's policy for its programme
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