My dissertation takes a deep dive into the ways in which local meaning influence the effectivity of gender equality strategies for rural development in Uganda. Taking a feminist post-structuralist discourse analysis approach, the dissertation examines meaning making processes in different geographical and political spaces, highlighting the central role of interpretation in the performance of gender equality strategies.The findings build on a 36-month stay in Kampala, Uganda, with frequent travel to four other regions in the country, namely Nwoya, Luwero, Rakai, and Mbale. Using a variety of methodologies (i.e. semi-structured interviews, multi-stakeholder meetings, policy document analysis, intra-household survey, focus group discussions, participant observation, questionnaires), the dissertation contributes and advances the field of social feminist geography by exploring intersections between discursive power, space, and meaning. In particular, it assesses how relations of gender are interpreted, contested and negotiated in different spaces, examining interlinkages between everyday local meaning making processes and global processes (Cornwall, Harrison, and Whitehead 2007). The dissertation highlights the gendered nature of local governments and national actors in Uganda, and the ensuing influence on how global gender norms are interpreted and adopted in local contexts, at the same time exposing tensions between global formulations and local