Men and anti-violence initiatives: transnational feminist reflections from Afghanistan and Pakistan
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Wu, Joyce
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
This article looks at how international development’s rhetoric for enlisting men to take up anti-violence against
women’s work is translated into reality. Based on fieldwork
conducted in Afghanistan and Pakistan, I argue that whilst
there have been success stories of men’s behaviour changing, the localisation of gender concepts and ideas into local
frameworks has not been as successful. Furthermore,
inattention to how gender relations are shaped by conflict
and violence results in the dilution of feminist values
around work on violence against women. This inattention
also privileges middle-class men’s activism at the expense
of activism by women and men from lower-socioeconomic
backgrounds. The article concludes with a call for further
transnational feminist dialogue and interventions in the
area of men’s involvement, so that current and future initiatives are critical, reflexive and relevant.
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Gender, Place and Culture
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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