
Two Conventional Wisdoms Dominate Debates About Why Women's Rights Advance In Some Places But Not Others. While Culture And Religion Are Understood To Be The Primary Barriers To Gender Equality, Efforts By International Institutions And Women's Groups To Change Social Norms Are Often Seen As The Most Effective Way To Reduce Discrimination. This Book Introduces A Third, Often Overlooked Explanation - The Core Rights Framework - To Account For How, Where, And Why Women's Rights Advance. It Argues That Female Labor Force Participation And Education Serve As Building Blocks, Or Core Rights, For The Advancement Of Other Women's Rights. Cultivating Core Rights Is Believed To Spur Group Consciousness, Ease Collective Action Problems, And Render Women In A Politically Relevant Group, Thereby Increasing The Prospects That Women's Rights Are Represented In The Polity. In Examining The Advancement Of Women's Rights Across Four Major Areas - Political, Nationality, Reproductive, And Property Rights - This Book Shows That The Conventional Wisdom About The Role Of International Norms And Culture Is Usually Overstated And Often Incomplete. It Also Presents Systematic Evidence Evaluating The Effectiveness Of Different Prescriptions For Improving Women's Lives Across A Broad Range Of Rights.
This book investigates why women's rights advance in certain regions while stagnating in others, challenging the conventional focus on culture and religion. Feryal M. Cherif, a scholar in political science, utilizes a comparative framework to argue that female labor force participation and education act as 'core rights' that catalyze broader social and political progress. By shifting the focus from international norm-setting to these foundational economic and educational building blocks, the author provides a new model for understanding gender equality outcomes.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts in political science and gender studies highlight this work as a rigorous challenge to standard international development narratives. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which makes it a valuable resource for researchers and students of comparative politics.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190211180
ISBN-13:
9780190211189
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