Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Myths about women's rights : how, where, and why rights advance / Feryal M. Cherif.

By: Material type: TextDescription: x, 280 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780190211172
  • 0190211172
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 305.42 23
LOC classification:
  • HQ1236 .C4735 2015
Contents:
Conventional wisdoms about women's rights -- The core rights framework -- The evolution of women's nationality rights -- Struggling for political equality: from de jure to de facto rights -- The path toward reproductive choice -- Toward economic equality: the status of women's property rights -- Culture, international norms, and core rights across issues: bringing it all together -- Appendix A-K.
Summary: 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.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Holdings
Cover image Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Vol info URL Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds Item hold queue priority Course reserves
Books African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights Library on order (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available

Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-268) and index.

Conventional wisdoms about women's rights -- The core rights framework -- The evolution of women's nationality rights -- Struggling for political equality: from de jure to de facto rights -- The path toward reproductive choice -- Toward economic equality: the status of women's property rights -- Culture, international norms, and core rights across issues: bringing it all together -- Appendix A-K.

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.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights | For Inquiries Contact » +255 272 510 510