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Islam, Development, and Urban Women's Reproductive Practices (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,317
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Islam, Development, and Urban Women's Reproductive Practices (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Studies in Anthropology
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Drawing on fieldwork conducted in Rabat, Morocco, this ethnography
analyzes the relationship between neoliberal development policies,
women's reproductive practices, and popular understandings of
Islam. In the 1990s, Morocco shifted its attention from economic to
human development, as economic reforms in the preceding decades
ultimately did not address social issues such as access to
healthcare and education and poverty. Development programs like the
National Initiative for Human Development seek to create modern
citizens who are responsible, self-sustaining, and will make
choices that better their well being. Hughes Rinker considers the
implications that the reorientation from primarily economic to
social development has on reproductive healthcare. Drawing on
observations in health clinics; interviews with patients, medical
staff, and at government and development agencies; and a document
analysis, she demonstrates how women appropriate the medical
practices and spaces of intervention aimed at creating modern
citizens to form new religious identities, novel ideas of
motherhood, and interpretations of neoliberal citizenship based on
Islamic beliefs. Women's interpretations of Islam are not
incompatible with the state's agenda for modernization, but rather
serve as rationale for women to accept modern reproductive
practices, such as contraception and pregnancy tests. However, even
though female patients appropriate medical practices, they
reinscribe development tropes that suggest they participate in
modernization through their reproductive bodies and mothering
instead of their productive labor. Hughes Rinker complicates
neoliberalism as she shows it is unproductive to have a set
conceptualization of neoliberal citizens, and more productive to
examine the practices and discourses that create such citizens.
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