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How dominant patriarchal structures permeated the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic-and women's multiple and varied experiences of and resistance to these structures.
Feminism and COVID-19 explores different, but common themes related to women's experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Julia Smith and Clare Wenham bring together a unique multi-centered, multi-disciplinary, and transnational author team, covering nine case studies from Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Hong Kong, Kenya, Nigeria, and the United Kingdom.
The chapters reveal how women around the world were both central to the delivery of the COVID-19 response, albeit unrecognized, and disproportionately affected by its secondary effects. The lost income and opportunities, as well as increased unpaid care work and violence, were not caused by the pathogen, but by preexisting structural inequities that pervade global political, economic, and social systems and structures. This inequality permeated global and local responses to the pandemic which, on the whole, only included gender considerations in the most superficial ways, but not in terms of money, protection or resources.
The transnational feminist perspectives speak to both global patterns and local heterogeneity, emphasizing the importance of highlighting the localized experiences of different groups of women impacted by the same global crisis.
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How dominant patriarchal structures permeated the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic-and women's multiple and varied experiences of and resistance to these structures.
Feminism and COVID-19 explores different, but common themes related to women's experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Julia Smith and Clare Wenham bring together a unique multi-centered, multi-disciplinary, and transnational author team, covering nine case studies from Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, China, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Hong Kong, Kenya, Nigeria, and the United Kingdom.
The chapters reveal how women around the world were both central to the delivery of the COVID-19 response, albeit unrecognized, and disproportionately affected by its secondary effects. The lost income and opportunities, as well as increased unpaid care work and violence, were not caused by the pathogen, but by preexisting structural inequities that pervade global political, economic, and social systems and structures. This inequality permeated global and local responses to the pandemic which, on the whole, only included gender considerations in the most superficial ways, but not in terms of money, protection or resources.
The transnational feminist perspectives speak to both global patterns and local heterogeneity, emphasizing the importance of highlighting the localized experiences of different groups of women impacted by the same global crisis.