Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Gender studies > Women's studies > Feminism
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Feminist Global Health Security (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,066
Discovery Miles 20 660
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Feminist Global Health Security (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Gender and International Relations
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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When Zika made headlines in 2016, images of women cradling babies
affected with microcephaly spread across the media and pulled on
heartstrings. But, as this book argues, whilst this outbreak was
about women and babies, this outbreak also highlighted the lack of
gendered considerations in global health security. The policy
response to Zika focused on limiting the spread of the virus
through domestic and civic cleaning to remove mosquitoes and by
asking women to defer pregnancy. Both of these actions are
inherently gendered, placing the burden of responsibility for
stemming the spread of disease on women. By taking Zika as its
primary case but also touching on COVID-19, Feminist Global Health
Security asks what the policy response to disease outbreaks tell us
about the role of women in global health security. More broadly,
what would global health policy look like if it were to take gender
seriously, and how would this impact global disease control? Beyond
raising questions of gender equity, Clare Wenham also considers
global health security's lack of consideration for sustainability
in epidemic preparedness and response. Wenham argues that global
health security in general has thus far lacked a substantive
feminist engagement, with the result that the very policies created
to manage an outbreak of disease disproportionately fail to protect
women. We know that women have biological pre-disposition and
social vulnerability to contracting a number of infectious
diseases, making them more susceptible to infection. Yet, the
dominant gender-blind policy narrative of global health security
has created pathways which focus on protecting the international
spread of disease and state economies, rather than protecting those
who are most likely to be affected. As such, the state-based
structure of global health security provides the fault line for
global health security's failure to engage women. This book
highlights the ways in which women are disadvantaged by global
health security policy, through engagement with feminist
international relations concepts of visibility, social and
stratified reproduction, intersectionality, and structural
violence. Wenham argues that it was no coincidence that poor, Black
women living in low-quality housing were the most affected by the
Zika outbreak and will continue to be so amid all epidemics, until
meaningful engagement with gender is incorporated into global
health security. As many news reports have made clear during COVID,
there has been a recent sea change in thinking about the secondary
effects of infectious disease control policy on women. However, we
have yet to see this reflected in global health policy.
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