"The gender equivalent to Chambers' poverty biases" is summarised as an ironic checklist of ways of "keeping women invisible in development planning" - eg treat the household as a homogenous and harmonious group of people. Concepts for gender training for development planners are discussed : i) The distinction between "biological" sex and "socially constructed" gender ii) The different processes that construct gender in different cultures iii) Focus on the gender division of labour iv) Rethink the meaning of production in the light of our analysis of the gender division of labour v) Shift from planning for practical needs to strategies for empowerment. Such training should help to get away from "aggregated concepts of development that planners have worked with in the past".
Publication year:
1991
Interest groups:
This will be of use to trainers of trainers as an aid for planning gender awareness-raising courses.
Pages:
12
In:
GADU Newspack
Editor:
C. March
Holdings:
IDS
Publisher reference:
Oxfam