2003
DOI: 10.1111/1467-8330.00298
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Women, NGOs and the Contradictions of Empowerment and Disempowerment: A Conversation

Abstract: For the last few years, both of us have grappled with difficult and complex issues of empowerment and disempowerment in relation to our respective research projects on women's grassroots organizations in several states of India, including Rajasthan, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Uttaranchal. As we exchanged notes over time, we noticed some recurring themes in our concerns-for example: the ways in which co-option of feminist and empowerment discourse(s) by the mainstream forces have become increasingly vexed quest… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
37
0
1

Year Published

2005
2005
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
4
3
1

Relationship

1
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 94 publications
(39 citation statements)
references
References 3 publications
1
37
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…The occasional use of these very procedures by staff members to discipline their clients also engenders hierarchies between program representatives and participants. One way to interpret these processes is to argue that the deployment by the state of empowerment as a category and strategy of governance and its professionalization are subverting empowerment's potentially radical agenda (Gledhill; see also Nagar and Raju 2003). The other way to look at it is to examine the unintended politicization that ends up happening in the context of state-initiated empowerment (Sharma 2006).…”
Section: Replymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The occasional use of these very procedures by staff members to discipline their clients also engenders hierarchies between program representatives and participants. One way to interpret these processes is to argue that the deployment by the state of empowerment as a category and strategy of governance and its professionalization are subverting empowerment's potentially radical agenda (Gledhill; see also Nagar and Raju 2003). The other way to look at it is to examine the unintended politicization that ends up happening in the context of state-initiated empowerment (Sharma 2006).…”
Section: Replymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While empowerment programs in the global South have been heavily critiqued for incorporating individuals into a market economy as self-sufficient economic actors, youth empowerment programs in cities of the United States operate with different goals (Fernando, 1997;Nagar and Raju, 2003;Dingo, 2012). These programs still focus on individual level programming, but with the goal of teaching ''life skills'' to help address multiple, relational experiences of poverty rather than solely through economic measures.…”
Section: The Rise Of Youth Empowerment Organizationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, on the heels of a growing alternative food movement, the model for such youth empowerment is increasingly deployed through urban gardening programs (Pudup, 2008;Knigge, 2009). 1 Unlike international development programs that approach empowerment through individualistic, economic means (Fernando, 1997;Nagar and Raju, 2003;Miraftab, 2004), youth empowerment organizations often approach impoverishment from a relational perspective. They recognize that young people are marginalized across multiple social and economic factors: age, race, class, gender, ability, language spoken, mobility, education, etc.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Very briefly, apart from actualisation at individual and collective level, empowerment is a relational construct, i.e., women learning to negotiate, communicate, seek support and defend their sense of 'self ' with dignity with other players in an environment which is essentially asymmetrical in terms of power (Batliwala, 1997;Cornwell, 2003;Kabeer, 1994;Kandiyoti, 1998;Rowlands, 1997). Defined thus, women's empowerment has an implicit component of involvement of stakeholders beyond the obvious-women themselves (Nagar & Raju, 2003).…”
Section: Intention To Action: Doing ''Empowerment'' On Groundmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was important for them they said that they are now recognized as individuals and that their identities are no longer masked under thumbprints nobody knows whom they belong to. They also narrated how earlier some of them would not even talk face-to-face with strangers particularly men (also, see Nagar & Raju, 2003).…”
Section: Grassroots Initiativesmentioning
confidence: 99%