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Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

This is a discussion on Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development within the Strictly Manly anti misandry forums, part of the Chit chat (MAIN) category; October 23, 2006 : 12:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Event Summary Maria Correia , Program Manager, Multi-Country Demobilization and Reintegration ...

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    Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development


    October 23, 2006 : 12:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.

    Event Summary
    Maria Correia, Program Manager, Multi-Country Demobilization and Reintegration Program, Africa Region, World Bank;
    Ian Bannon, Manager, Conflict Prevention and Reconstruction Unit, Social Development Department,
    World Bank;
    Mary Amuyunzu-Nyamongo, Executive Director, African Institute for Health and Development;
    Gary Barker, Chief Executive, Instituto Promundo;
    Michal Avni, Gender Adviser, Office of Population and Reproductive Health and Coordinator of the Interagency Gender Working Group, U.S. Agency for International Development

    Gender studies have traditionally focused on women and girls, paying little attention to the attitudes and behaviors of men. But a new book from the World Bank, The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development, attempts to bring the gender and development debate full circle—from a focus on empowering women to a more comprehensive perspective. At the Wilson Center on October 23, 2006, the book’s editors, Ian Bannon and Maria C. Correia, were joined by contributors Gary Barker and Mary Amuyunzu-Nyamongo to address the emerging reality that attaining gender equality will be difficult, if not impossible, without first changing the ways in which masculinity is defined and acted upon.

    "Addressing gender issues ultimately will require liberating men and women from the straightjackets of gender norms…. This process has begun for women, but efforts for men are incipient,” said Michal Avni, gender adviser in the Office of Population and Reproductive Health and coordinator of the Interagency Gender Working Group at the U.S. Agency for International Development. To date, attempts to incorporate men’s issues into the gender discussion have been met with resistance: “There are great concerns that there are limited resources for women, and that if we put [resources] into men’s issues, we will be taking money away from the women, who really deserve it,” said Maria Correia, program manager of the Multi-Country Demobilization and Reintegration Program in the Africa Region of the World Bank. “I challenge that assumption,” she added.

    Achieving Manhood

    A collection of nine case studies, The Other Half of Gender aims to identify men’s issues and uncover the connections between gender and development— specifically in the framework of conflict concerns, such as rising male unemployment, the declining proportion of men in higher education, and boys’ underperformance in primary and secondary schools. Gary Barker, chief executive at Instituto Promundo in Brazil and a contributor to the book, asked, “Why should we care about men? Why does masculinity matter?” Men and women’s behaviors are not created in a vacuum. Rather, they are molded from cultural mores, traditions, and customs. Looking strictly at women leaves out those factors that contribute to women’s marginalization.

    Masculinity is defined differently in many parts of the world. In sub-Saharan Africa, being a man means being a provider. This status is contingent upon attaining several prerequisites: gainful employment, land, the bride price (money or goods paid to the bride’s family), and often permission from the tribe or community leader—sometimes called the “Big Man.” Many men in sub-Saharan Africa cannot meet these requirements. According to Barker, men who cannot achieve a legitimate version of manhood will search for other ways to assert their masculinity: “Men with low equity are more prone to violence and arrest records. There is also an association with delinquency, high rates of violence against women, and low condom use.”

    Conflict groups have learned to feed off the problems facing men. “Some conflict settings show that there is deliberate targeting of boys and young men…to recruit them into conflict and the use of weapons,” Barker said. In Africa, armed groups have used techniques such as the manipulation of traditional rites of passage, as well as threats, coercion, and propaganda, to socialize men and young boys into conflict. Similarly, he noted, young boys in India believe that “a ‘real man’ is virile, aggressive, and willing to fight.” This version of manhood is being adopted by Hindu and Muslim groups who are “recruiting men and telling them that their lots in life are because of other religious groups,” he said.

    The Kenyan Case

    Mary Amuyunzu-Nyamongo, executive director of the African Institute for Health and Development, studied shifts in gender roles in six districts in Kenya. Following the country’s financial collapse in the 1990s, income inequality increased; and in 2004, 57 percent of Kenyans lived below poverty line, while the top 10 percent of the country controlled 48 percent of the wealth. Some men found alternative livelihoods, but many could not find work. Unemployment spiked, yet the expectations of men did not change. “Collapsing livelihoods have led to a crisis of masculinity in rural Kenya,” she said.

    Men’s livelihoods were also threatened by the increasing numbers of women with jobs and higher levels of education. Years of effort to increase girls’ education started to pay off, as women found jobs and gained financial independence. “Women’s economic independence threatens men’s egos and leads to tension,” she said. “Marginalized men will look for different ways to assert their authority.” The study revealed that educated and financially independent women suffered higher levels of violence: “We concluded that the beatings were a way of putting women in their place,” she said.

    Balancing the Gender Scale

    To create positive impacts on both men and women, gender discussions need to be reframed. If gender remains polarized, women suffer a severe disservice, Amuyunzu-Nyamongo said: “We may be helping women [by focusing on them], but we may not realize that we are increasing sources of vulnerability for them.” For example, she noted that women are being asked to go for family planning, but in many communities women must first get permission from their husbands to go to the clinic. “Without addressing the issues of men, we are losing the battle,” she said. Reframing the debate has already proven effective in some areas, Barker noted. In Brazil, men with higher education levels are more involved with family. Other studies targeting men’s issues helped increase condom use and men’s involvement in child care, as well as lower rates of alcohol abuse, heart disease, and depression.

    Despite positive returns, gender studies focusing on men remain few and far between, Barker said: “We are largely still looking at individual change. We need to take this beyond individual-focused interventions.” The climate may be right to begin focusing on men. National-level policies are changing in certain countries: Scandinavian paternity laws award men paternity leave, and new Latin American policies aim to make gender norms more equitable. Additionally, Barker said, there is action on the individual level: “There are voices of resistance. And they are finding other men and women who also believe in questioning and challenging the salient [gender roles].” In order to scale up interventions and tap into the existing discontent with gender norms, however, the development community must first decide on a course of action. “I hope we don’t waste another decade looking at who is most victimized,” said Avni. “I hope we can bring together these two notions of gender.”

    By Alison Williams

    http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cf...vent_id=205200
    Last edited by julie; 1st-August-2009 at 01:58 PM. Reason: add link
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Sounds feminist.

    World Bank = Globalist Feminists.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Quote Quote from Male-Rights-Network View Post
    Sounds feminist.

    World Bank = Globalist Feminists.
    lol. But it is something that has some good points, I thought. It does seem IMO that if you deal with men's issues it will have a spin off affect.
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    I like this article, Jules...thanks for sharing it!


    "Civilization can only revive when there shall come into being in a number of individuals a new tone of mind, independent of the prevalent one among the crowds, and in opposition to it- a tone of mind which will gradually win influence over the collective one, and in the end determine its character. Only an ethical movement can rescue us from barbarism, and the ethical comes into existence only in individuals."

    "Until he extends his circle of compassion to include all living things, man will not himself find peace."
    -Albert Schweitzer

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Quote Quote from TERA View Post
    I like this article, Jules...thanks for sharing it!

    My pleasure.
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    This World Bank books is another one of these feminist "remolding man" treatises.

    They only talk about men to the extent that he should be remoulded into the feminist image.

    Beware of this sort of thing. It might seem to be sympathetic to men's issues but it is not.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Quote Quote from Male-Rights-Network View Post
    This World Bank books is another one of these feminist "remolding man" treatises.

    They only talk about men to the extent that he should be remoulded into the feminist image.

    Beware of this sort of thing. It might seem to be sympathetic to men's issues but it is not.
    MRN, I am wondering what you think is a feminised man? And what isn't?

    NZ is supposed to be a true Matriarchy society, yet our men are not girly men. We don't have anywhere near the materialism America and England has either.

    One good thing for NZ has been the change from warriors to fathers (still in progress) but even the Maori and Pacific Island men say this is a good thing for their culture.

    I personally think Africa has a massive violence problem between men on men and men on women. Is this Patriarchy?
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    I think it is important to add that some Pacific Island's are also considered Matriarchy yet it is an accepted fact in feminism over here that the women are more violent than the men.

    We have had a documentary about it on TV and we do have something sorted for the refuge of men in this culture.

    I phoned a female's school the other day to let them know how 3 of their girls were speaking about males at a railway station. The deputy principle was grateful and said they will be dealing with it at assembly.
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Hey, I better just make it clear again that I am not affiliated with any feminist organisations nor have I read any feminist books or studied in women's studies.

    But I do want to show how serious things are when a warrior and a father are combined.

    http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/top-sto...brink-friends/


    Actor and scriptwriter Rob Mokaraka decided to die at the hands of the police because of the stress of a custody battle, say his friends.
    Mokaraka, 36, is in Auckland City Hospital six days after being shot in the stomach after allegedly threatening police with what they believed was a firearm.
    An officer opened fire after a 111 call had warned police of an armed man. The call -- actually made by Mokaraka -- was followed by a confrontation in a Pt Chevalier street when the actor advanced on officers carrying a meat cleaver and what appeared to be a gun wrapped in a towel.
    Sources told the Herald on Sunday Mokoraka's actions were as a result of stress caused by a dispute with former partner Kate Parker over custody of their daughter.
    Friend and mentor Pita Turei could not confirm the custody dispute but said Mokaraka's decision to trick the police into shooting him were "the actions of a normal Maori man in our times".
    "I have bore witness to the way we as Maori men respond to pressure and stress. It is usually violent and tragic."
    Turei said Mokaraka's apparent desire to commit suicide by having police shoot him needed to be discussed, considering the high rate of violent suicide among Maori men.
    "We have a number of suicide pacts and copy cat suicides. If there is one suicide others will follow. So in a way Rob has lifted the bar here -- he's invented a new form of suicide by police firing squad.
    "Rob is a very valuable person because he has survived and he is a person who can talk, articulate and write..."
    Mokaraka has been charged in a special bedside court hearing with one count of possession of an offensive weapon and another of assault with a weapon and is due to appear in Auckland District Court on August 19.
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Quote Quote from Billy View Post


    They accept the truth? Are you sure they are femis?
    I am not sure of anything when it comes to the gender war. It has been the hardest thing I have yet to be involved in.

    All I know is that the doors are shut to anti feminists. Whether that makes everyone in the know and everyone who works in the fields with men and women feminists or feminist passives, I am not sure.

    From my observations I think it is women who are usually the more violent ones in gender relations.
    They are in my mind also.

    Think about it, we learn Boys don't hit girls. And most men do anything to keep peace in the house.
    They do want to keep the peace I agree. But there seems to be a female side in this too.

    Women on the other hand like to stir shit and they are not told they aren't suppose to hit men.
    This is hard to reply to. Women do tend to like excitement in their lives also so I can see it seen as shit stirring. Men get excitement outside of the home, me thinks.

    But I agree women are not taught to respect men as men are taught to respect women from a young age.
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.

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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    "Addressing gender issues ultimately will require liberating men and women from the straightjackets of gender norms…. This process has begun for women, but efforts for men are incipient,” said Michal Avni, gender adviser in the Office of Population and Reproductive Health and coordinator of the Interagency Gender Working Group at the U.S. Agency for International Development.
    Mr Avni went on to say, "It is clear to any objective observer that my 'norms' are far more important and realistic than your straight-jacketed ones because I have this really really huge title which was conferred upon me by a really really huge International but nevertheless American organisation wholly owned by a black President, and you are just a nobody. So there"

    Or in International Agency-speak, 'Mine's bigger than your's'. "

    Cum dilectione hominum et odio vitiorum
    Love the Sinner but not the Sin.
    (St. Augustine)

    For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers,
    against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. “
    (and within ourselves)
    (Ephesians 6:12 (KJV)

    A Feminist is a human being who has lost her way and turned vicious.
    If you meet one on the road as you Go your Own Way,
    offer kindness but keep your sword drawn.
    (Me)





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    Re: Book Discussion--The Other Half of Gender: Men’s Issues in Development

    Quote Quote from Percy View Post
    American organisation wholly owned by a black President, and you are just a nobody. So there"
    Poor Obama. You'd think the country could have been less screwed up for the first black president. Or even outsiders.

    But no! He has to take responsibility for all that has been in place before him. When were the elections again? When did this speech take place?
    Ignorance is the Oppressor, Vigilance the Liberator.


 

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