“…This framework has been recognized as a promising equity tool (e.g. Mendell, Dyck, Ndumbe-Eyoh, & Morisson, 2012;Palència, Malmusi, & Borrell, 2014;National Collaborating Centre for Healthy Public Policy, 2015) and has taken up in various policy-related contexts including violence (Learning Network, 2015), mental health and substance use (Hunting, Grace, & Hankivsky, 2015), social work (Mulé, 2015), homelessness (Zufferey, 2017), human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome policy (Jordan-Zachery, 2013), indigenous policies (Clark, 2012;Hankivsky & Jordan-Zachery, 2019), and the representation of minority women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields (Armstrong & Jovanovic, 2015). Despite the recognition across many sectors that intersectionality-informed frameworks are necessary to capture the complexity of people's lives, they have not yet permeated the international development field.…”