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Gender and Human Rights

Banda, Fareda

Authors



Contributors

John Eekelaar
Editor

Rob George
Editor

Abstract

Gender is all the rage–rage meaning it is both a focus of attention and also anger. Human rights practitioners owe a debt of gratitude to development specialists who elaborated on the significance of gender as a category. For human rights purposes, the term gender can be linked to the intertwining of development with law and policy in the 1970s and specifically the UN Decade for Women from 1975–1985, which had as its goals equality, development and peace. While human rights treaties do not include gender as a protected category in their non-discrimination provisions, listing only sex, human rights treaty bodies have broadened the scope of their understanding of gender. The ‘family’ and its constitution has again become the site of the resistance in the ‘gender wars’.

Citation

Banda, F. (2020). Gender and Human Rights. In J. Eekelaar, & R. George (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of Family Law and Policy (2nd edition) (309-326). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003058519-30

Acceptance Date Nov 21, 2019
Online Publication Date Jul 27, 2020
Publication Date Jul 27, 2020
Deposit Date Apr 15, 2020
Publisher Routledge
Pages 309-326
Series Title Routledge International Handbooks
Series ISSN 2767-4886
Book Title Routledge Handbook of Family Law and Policy (2nd edition)
ISBN 9780367195526
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003058519-30


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