Working Paper

IDS Discussion Paper;378

Making a Difference? Gender and Participatory Development

Published on 25 January 2001

Participation, empowerment and inclusion have become the new development buzzwords. As the development mainstream takes on some of the practices of participatory development, feminist concerns about representation, agency and voice become ever more pressing.

Amidst rhetoric about full participation and the involvement of the community or all stakeholders, evidence from some contexts suggests that the very projects and processes that appear so inclusive and transformative may turn out to be supportive of a status quo that is highly inequitable for women. A number of potent challenges arise once a closer look is taken at participatory development and questions are asked about who participates, in what and on what basis, who benefits and who loses out. This paper seeks to address some of these questions and challenges.

Authors

Honorary Associate

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
authors
Cornwall, Andrea
isbn
1 85864 337 6
language
English

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