Title:
Creating citizens who demand just governance : gender and development in the twenty-first century
Authors:
Mukhopadhyay, M.
Year:
2003
Serial number:
3
Journal:
Gender and development
Volume:
11
Pages:
45
-
56
Language:
eng
Subject:
Development Cooperation General
Keywords:
gender
,
governance
,
empowerment
,
capacity building
Abstract:
The issue of good governance assumed enormous significance in debates on global development in the 1990s. By and large, this translated into policies aimed at building accountability of public
administration institutions to the broad ‘public’, but omitted to consider two key issues: first, the ‘public’ consists of women and men, who have gender-differentiated needs and interests; second,
civil-society institutions have a role to play in creating the demand for democratic, accountable, and just governance. To address these omissions, and to reinforce the importance of bringing a gender
perspective to global debates and approaches to international development, KIT Gender, at the Royal Tropical Institute in Amsterdam, initiated a three-year programme in 1999. It is entitled
‘Gender, Citizenship, and Governance’. This article discusses the programme and its relevance to international development, and provides three case studies from the programme; from India,
Bangladesh, and South Africa.
Organization:
KIT - Royal Tropical Institute
Country:
Bangladesh
,
India
,
South Africa
Region:
South Asia
,
Southern Africa
Category:
Practice
Right:
© 2003 Royal Tropical Institute
Document type:
E-article
File:
455659.pdf