Abstract

ABSTRACTHere we provide a critical reading of gender mainstreaming as a potential emancipatory force that has been co-opted within orientalist–occidentalist polemics. This remains a critical period in the “mainstreaming” debate, where feminist reappropriation is necessary to repoliticize the concept and reorient development sector focus from tokenistic inclusivity to social transformation. We consider two sides of the debate. In the first scenario, the requirement for gender mainstreaming in international development discourse has not only failed to address its original feminist goals, but has become (or remained) an extension of orientalist, neocolonial projects to control and “civilize” developing economies. Here, a putative concern for gender equality in development is used as a means to distinguish between the modern, civilized One and the colonial, traditional Other. In the second scenario, gender mainstreaming is held up as all that these “othered” occidentalist forces stand against; an exemplar of the inappropriate imposition of “western” moralistic paradigms in non-western contexts. Ultimately, the co-optation of gendered discourses in development through these orientalist–occidentalist polemics serves to obfuscate the continued depoliticization of mainstreaming. A critical question remains: can gender mainstreaming ever transcend this discursive impasse and reassert its feminist transformatory potential?

Highlights

  • In this article we bring together two tropes of inquiry: the feminist transformatory project of gender mainstreaming (GeM) and co-optation effected through Orientalist and Occidentalist polemics

  • This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Feminist Journal of Politics on 21 Mar 2017, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/[Article DOI]

  • We see an Occidentalist resistance to the inappropriate imposition and retrogressive “decivilizing” corruption of “Western” moralistic paradigms in non-Western contexts

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Summary

Introduction

In this article we bring together two tropes of inquiry: the feminist transformatory project of gender mainstreaming (GeM) and co-optation effected through Orientalist and Occidentalist polemics. This renders GeM vulnerable to repoliticization in the service of Orientalist and Occidentalist discourses, but, importantly, this co-optation can simultaneously obscure the continued and increasing depoliticization of gender and equality initiatives in development arenas in a negative cyclical dynamic.

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