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Articles

Gender and Australian Aid Policy: can women's rights be advanced within a neo-liberal framework?

Pages 319-331 | Published online: 13 Aug 2008
 

Abstract

The issue of gender and development has been an important part of the development discourse since the Mexico City Women Conference in 1973. This concern has been very slow to transform itself into policy. For development agencies including AusAID it has been a subsidiary policy area or an add-on, as a recipe might say'add women and stir'. The White Paper of 2007 brought gender to the centre of policy as an overarching principle. The question that arises is the extent to which these policies fit into or are driven by the neo-liberal paradigm underpinning the aid program, or if these policies can challenge it by positing a rights agenda. The 2007 Gender policy tries to sit between the two in that it focuses on the economic role that women can play in fostering growth on the one hand, and the denial of human rights that marginalisation and disempowerment represents. This paper will explore the development of gender policy in AusAID, and compare it with the development of policy of other agencies that follow the neo-liberal framework in particular the World Bank and ADB. Finally the paper will make some suggestions for the new Labor government to strengthen the Policy.

Notes

1. This objective was originally fourth in the list. The original order was ‘To improve women's access to education and health care’; ‘To improve women's access to economic resources’; ‘To promote women's participation and leadership in decision making at all levels’; ‘To promote the human rights of women and assist efforts to eliminate discrimination against women’; and ‘To incorporate a gender perspective in Australia's aid activities’.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Patrick Kilby

Patrick Kilby coordinates the Masters in Applied Anthropology and Participatory Development Program at the Australian National University. His research interests include aid and poverty, nongovernmental organisations, empowerment and marginalisation, gender, and managing development activities

Kate Olivieri

Kate Olivieri is a public servant at the Australian Government's Office for Women, having previously worked in AusAID and the former Department for Employment and Workplace Relations. She is currently completing a Masters of Applied Anthropology and Participatory Development at the ANU, and her research interests include gender as a crosscutting issue in developing and developed countries

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