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Human Rights & Social Movements

How gender-aware are social movements? Do human rights approaches always contribute to gender equality? This theme takes a gendered look at social movements. It examines rights instruments – such as those relating to workers, children, information, land rights –  as well as those international rights frameworks focused specifically on women such as the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).

BRIDGE publications

Cutting Edge Pack (CEP) icon

Gender and Citizenship Cutting Edge Pack

There are those for whom citizenship is a site of achievement, of power and validation of their place in the world - a way of achieving positive change and gaining a better standard of living for all groups. For others it can be a malign concept - exclusive, alienating or threatening - serving only to marginalise and exclude by allowing some in and expelling those who do not fit on the basis of gender, class or race. Many development workers though have argued that using the language and the arguments of citizenship is a powerful way of working in development programmes that seek to bring about gender equality through focusing on people.

BRIDGE publications

Cutting Edge Pack (CEP) icon

Gender and Governance Cutting Edge Pack

Governance processes – with their emphasis on principles of accountability, transparency, responsiveness and inclusiveness – should be a means to social transformation. But despite this potential, they are failing to deliver on gender equality, and women are having to struggle to get their voices heard and needs met. This Cutting Edge Pack maps out persistent obstacles to gender equality in governance and offers possible ways forward - including promoting gender balance in positions of authority, making rights central to governance institutions and processes at all levels, and building political will for change.


Documents on Human Rights & Social Movements (683)

  1. Water, Privatisation and Conflict: Women from the Cochabamba Valley

    Author: E. Peredo Beltran, Heinrich Boell Foundation, Jan 2004
    The women of Cochabamba, Bolivia, play a fundamental role in protecting water. Neoliberal policies have led to greater male migration, resulting in the feminisation of rural areas, with women carrying ...more
  2. Gender and Climate Change Cutting Edge Pack - Supporting Resources Collection

    Author: G Aboud, Institute of Development Studies, Sussex, UK, Jan 2011
    This Supporting Resources Collection - part of the BRIDGE Cutting Edge Pack on Gender and Climate Change- showcases existing work on gender and climate change. It presents summaries of a ...more
  3. Gender and Development In Brief ‘Gender and Climate Change’ – edition 22

    Author: E Skinner;A Brody;G Aboud, Institute of Development Studies, Sussex, UK, Nov 2011
    Climate change is increasingly being recognised as a global crisis, but responses to it have so far been overly focused on scientific and economic solutions. How then do we move ...more
  4. Gender and Climate Change: Overview Report

    Author: E Skinner, Institute of Development Studies, Sussex, UK, Nov 2011
    Climate change is increasingly being recognised as a global crisis, but responses to it have so far been overly focused on scientific and economic solutions. How then do we move ...more
  5. WIDE Statement to the 54th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women

    Women in Development Europe , Mar 2010
    In the present context of multiple global crises (economic, financial, food, energy, climate and care), this statement from WIDE expresses a concern that gender equality and enforcement of women's human ...more


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