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The (missing) subjects of research on gender and global governance: Toward inquiry into the ruling relations of development
Authors:Marie L Campbell  Elena Kim
Institution:1. Faculty of Human and Social Development, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada;2. Department of Psychology, American University – Central Asia, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
Abstract:Responding to the Special Issue's call for “new thinking” on gender and governance in developing societies, we introduce our research on the social organization of development knowledge and its ethical implications. Our feminist-based approach, institutional ethnography, analyses the ruling relations of development and the standpoints represented in knowledge about development and its governance. Our paper offers an alternative to what we see as “the institutional standpoint” prevailing, but taken for granted, in business and society scholarship addressing development. Instead of theorizing development relationships between institutions and their “stakeholders,” we illustrate what can be learned about the social relations of development beginning from the experiences of local subjects. Our analysis of an environmental research and development project in Uzbekistan shows that being missed is knowledge about development subjects that could have revealed what is locally relevant and needed. Instead, we discover gender inequality being constituted, unknowingly, within this project's institutionally generated knowledge and the activities it authorizes.
Keywords:
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