2020
DOI: 10.1177/0907568220976784
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Theorising gendered childhoods and girls’ schooling: Poverty, patriarchy and girls’ education in urban India

Abstract: This paper offers gendered accounts of girls’ schooling and childhood from urban India. It challenges global ‘girl effect’ narratives by grappling with the interplay of poverty and caste patriarchy and how it shapes families’ struggles and concerns and girls’ (re)productive labour, (un)freedoms and classroom experiences. Moving beyond the notion of ‘multiple childhoods’ it develops a conceptual framework that accounts for the way the state, the market, economic inequalities and local patriarchies inscribe poor… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In between this blaming process, patriarchal structures are often considered a separate subject/variable (e.g., Narwana & Gill, 2020), thereby taking away the spotlight from the primary root cause (the intersection of caste and patriarchy) and its deep embedded networks within the socio-economic difficulties in Dalit girls’ education. Such a common-sensical approach to Dalit girls’ education conveniently detaches itself from the gendered experiences and the geopolitics of patriarchal and marginal histories that have shaped the educational experiences of Dalit girls today (Yunus, 2021).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In between this blaming process, patriarchal structures are often considered a separate subject/variable (e.g., Narwana & Gill, 2020), thereby taking away the spotlight from the primary root cause (the intersection of caste and patriarchy) and its deep embedded networks within the socio-economic difficulties in Dalit girls’ education. Such a common-sensical approach to Dalit girls’ education conveniently detaches itself from the gendered experiences and the geopolitics of patriarchal and marginal histories that have shaped the educational experiences of Dalit girls today (Yunus, 2021).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently a few studies, that is, Balagopalan (2010) and Yunus (2021), explicitly challenge the broader common-sensical assumptions embedded in the socio-economic barriers working against Dalit girls’ education and attempt to unmask the caste and patriarchal synergies present behind them.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These are marked by colonising forces that attach presumed South Asian values to the “pre-modern” and traditional (Behera, 2007a). Importantly, colonial and postcolonial experiences continuously shape societal norms, driving discourses and practices that instrumentalise children’s bodies in the quest for “modernisation” (Balagopalan, 2010; Yunus, 2021). Within the larger literature on South Asian childhoods there is less work from Kashmir.…”
Section: Literature Review and Theoretical Framework To Understand Ch...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They conclude, ‘in South Asia gender discrimination is most severe.’ A burgeoning literature attests to the diverse strands of this oppression. It includes—but is not limited to: public spending (Panday & Chowdhury, 2022), health (Fikree & Pasha, 2004), the labour market (Delavande & Zafar, 2019) and education (Yunus, 2021). The inequality is compounded by patriarchal cultures (Sechiyama, 2013), enduring violence against women (Bennett & Manderson, 2003), as well as the intersection of gender with other social characteristics such as faith (Ahmed-Ghosh, 2015), disability (Nakkeeran & Nakkeeran, 2018), sexual orientation (Roy, 2020) and indigeneity (Sigamany, 2017).…”
Section: Research Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%