1.
Crush, J.: Power of development. Routledge, London (1995).
2.
Cornwall, A.: Readings in gender in Africa. International African Institute, London (2005).
3.
Holmes, M.: What is gender?: sociological aproaches. SAGE, London (2007).
4.
Rai, S.: Gender and the political economy of development: from nationalism to globalization. Polity, Cambridge (2002).
5.
Harcourt, W. ed: The Palgrave handbook of gender and development: critical engagements in feminist theory and practice. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, NY (2016).
6.
Smyth, I.: Talking of gender: words and meanings in development organisations. Development in Practice. 17, 582–588 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/09614520701469591.
7.
Haynes, J.: Palgrave advances in development studies. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2005).
8.
Desai, V., Potter, R.B.: The companion to development studies. Routledge, Abingdon, Oxon (2014).
9.
Jolly, R.: Milestones and turning points in development thinking. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2012).
10.
Kingsbury, D.: International development: issues and challenges. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2012).
11.
Kothari, U., Minogue, M.: Development theory and practice: critical perspectives. Palgrave, Basingstoke (2002).
12.
Rist, G.: Development as a Buzzword. Development in Practice. 17, 485–491 (2007).
13.
Rist, G.: The history of development: from western origins to global faith. Zed Books, London (2014).
14.
Haynes, J.: Palgrave advances in development studies. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills (2005).
15.
Allen, T., Thomas, A., Open University: Poverty and development into the 21st century. the Open University in association with Oxford University  Press, Oxford (2000).
16.
Veltmeyer, H.: The critical development studies handbook: tools for change. Fernwood Pub, Halifax, N.S. (2011).
17.
Alsop, R., Fitzsimons, A., Lennon, K.: Theorizing gender. Polity, Oxford (2002).
18.
Connell, R., Pearse, R.: Gender: in world perspective. Polity, Cambridge, UK (2015).
19.
Cranny-Francis, A.: Gender studies: terms and debates. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2003).
20.
Davis, K., Evans, M., Lorber, J.: Handbook of gender and women’s studies. Sage, London (2006).
21.
Holmes, M.: Gender and everyday life. Routledge, London (2009).
22.
Marchbank, J., Letherby, G.: Introduction to gender: social science perspectives. Pearson Longman, Harlow (2007).
23.
Moi, T.: What is a woman?: and other essays. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1999).
24.
Cornwall, A., Harrison, E., Whitehead, A.: Feminisms in development: contradictions, contestations and challenges. Zed Books, London (2007).
25.
Cornwall, A., Edström, J., Greig, A.: Men and development: politicizing masculinities. Zed Books, London (2011).
26.
Cornwall, A., Edwards, J. eds: Feminisms, empowerment and development: changing women’s lives. Zed Books, London (2014).
27.
Oxfam. Gender and Development Unit, JSTOR (Organization): Gender and development.
28.
Harcourt, W. ed: The Palgrave handbook of gender and development: critical engagements in feminist theory and practice. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, NY (2016).
29.
Jackson, C., Pearson, R.: Feminist visions of development: gender, analysis and policy. Routledge, London (1998).
30.
McIlwaine, C., Datta, K.: From Feminising to Engendering Development. Gender, Place & Culture. 10, 369–382 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369032000155564.
31.
Momsen, J.H.: Gender and development. Routledge, London (2010).
32.
Oberhauser, A.M., Johnston-Anumonwo, I.: Global perspectives on gender and space: engaging feminism and development. Routledge, New York (2014).
33.
Sarkar, A.: Gender and development. Pragun Publications, New Delhi (2006).
34.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
35.
Levine, P.: The British Empire: sunrise to sunset. Pearson Education, Harlow (2013).
36.
Stabile, C.A.: Unveiling imperialism: media, gender and the war on Afghanistan. Media, Culture & Society. 27, 765–782 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1177/0163443705055734.
37.
Epprecht, M.: Loose Women and the Crisis of Colonialism. In: ‘This matter of women is getting very bad’: gender, development and politics in colonial Lesotho. pp. 80–97. University of Natal Press, Pietermaritzburg (2000).
38.
Cornwall, A.: Readings in gender in Africa. International African Institute, London (2005).
39.
McClintock, A.: Imperial leather: race, gender, and sexuality in the colonial contest. Routledge, New York (1995).
40.
Sinha, M.: Gender and Imperialism: Colonial Policy and the Ideology of Moral Imperialism in Late Nineteenth-Century Bengal. In: Changing men: new directions in research on men and masculinity. pp. 217–231. Sage, Newbury Park (1987).
41.
Socolow, S.M.: The women of colonial Latin America. Cambridge University Press, New York (2015).
42.
Ballantyne, T., Burton, A.M.: Bodies in contact: rethinking colonial encounters in world history. Duke University Press, Durham, N.C. (2005).
43.
Bannerji, H.: Age of Consent and Hegemonic Social Reform. In: Gender and imperialism. pp. 21–44. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1998).
44.
Barnes, T.A.: The Fight for Control of African Women’s Mobility in Colonial Zimbabwe, 1900-1939. Signs. 17, 586–608 (1992).
45.
Bear, L.G.: Miscegenations of modernity: constructing european respectability and race in the Indian railway colony, 1857-1931. Women’s History Review. 3, 531–548 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1080/09612029400200069.
46.
Bryceson, D.F.: The Proletarianization of Women in Tanzania. Review of African Political Economy. 4–27 (1980).
47.
Burton, A.M.: Empire in question: reading, writing, and teaching British imperialism. Duke University Press, Durham [N.C.] (2011).
48.
Camiscioli, E.: Women, Gender, Intimacy, and Empire. Journal of Women’s History. 25, 138–148 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1353/jowh.2013.0056.
49.
Chaudhuri, N., Strobel, M.: Western women and imperialism: complicity and resistance. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (1992).
50.
Collingham, E.M.: Imperial bodies: the physical experience of the Raj, c. 1800-1947. Polity, Oxford (2001).
51.
Kimmel, M.S., Hearn, J., Connell, R.: Handbook of studies on men & masculinities. Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks (2005).
52.
Cornwall, A.: Readings in gender in Africa. International African Institute, London (2005).
53.
Dalrymple, W.: White Mughals: love and betrayal in eighteenth-century India. Harper Perennial, London (2004).
54.
Afshar, H.: Women, development and survival in the Third World. Longman, London (1991).
55.
Turshen, M.: African women: A political economy. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
56.
Enloe, C.H.: Bananas, beaches and bases: making feminist sense of international politics. University of California Press, Berkeley (2014).
57.
Engels, D.: The limits of gender ideology: Bengali women, the colonial state, and the private sphere, 1890–1930. Women’s Studies International Forum. 12, 425–437 (1989). https://doi.org/10.1016/0277-5395(89)90038-1.
58.
Gender & History. Volume 26,.
59.
Grier, B.: Pawns, Porters, and Petty Traders: Women in the Transition to Cash Crop Agriculture in Colonial Ghana. Signs. 17, 304–328 (1992).
60.
Moya, J.C.: The Oxford handbook of Latin American history. Oxford University Press, New York (2011).
61.
Hall, C., Rose, S.O.: At home with the empire: metropolitan culture and the imperial world. Cambridge University Press, New York (2006).
62.
Haskins, V.K., Lowrie, C.: Colonization and domestic service: historical and contemporary perspectives. Routledge, New York, N.Y. (2015).
63.
Inayatullah, N., Riley, R.L.: Interrogating imperialism: Conversations on gender, race, and war. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2006).
64.
Johnson, L.L., Lipsett-Rivera, S.: The Faces of honor: sex, shame, and violence in colonial Latin  America. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque (1998).
65.
Kuznesof, E.: The House, the Street and the Brothel: Gender in Latin American History, http://sas-space.sas.ac.uk/5226/1/1686-2161-1-PB.pdf.
66.
Larraín, J.: Theories of development: capitalism, colonialism and dependency. Polity, Cambridge (1989).
67.
Collectif de femmes d’Amérique latine et de la Caraïbe.: Mujeres. English.  Slaves of slaves : the challenge of Latin American women / Latin  American and Caribbean Women’s Collective ; translated by Michael  Pallis., http://pugwash.lib.warwick.ac.uk/record=b1443540.
68.
Levine, P.: Prostitution, race, and politics: policing venereal disease in the British Empire. Routledge, New York (2003).
69.
Liddle, J., Joshi, R.: Gender and Imperialism in British India. Economic and Political Weekly. 20, (1985).
70.
Liddle, J., Nakajima, S.: States of distinction: gender, Japan and the international political economy. Women’s History Review. 13, 521–540 (2004).
71.
Parpart, J.L., Staudt, K.A.: Women and the state in Africa. Rienner, Boulder (1989).
72.
Mani, L.: Contentious Traditions: The Debate on Sati in Colonial India. Cultural Critique. (1987). https://doi.org/10.2307/1354153.
73.
Martin, J.W.: Becoming Banana Cowboys: White-Collar Masculinity, the United Fruit Company and Tropical Empire in Early Twentieth-Century Latin America. Gender & History. 25, 317–338 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.12020.
74.
McClintock, A.: Imperial leather: race, gender, and sexuality in the colonial contest. Routledge, New York (1995).
75.
Midgley, C.: Gender and imperialism. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1998).
76.
Krishnamurty, J.: Women in colonial India: essays on survival, work and the state. Oxford University Press, Delhi (1999).
77.
Chaudhuri, N., Strobel, M.: Western women and imperialism: complicity and resistance. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (1992).
78.
Ouzgane, L., Morrell, R.: African masculinities: men in Africa from the late nineteenth century to the present. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2005).
79.
Oyěwùmí, O.: Gender epistemologies in Africa: Gendering traditions, spaces, social institutions, and identities. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2011).
80.
Robertson, C.C., Berger, I.: Women and class in Africa. Africana, New York (1986).
81.
Rothchild, D.S., Chazan, N.: The precarious balance: state and society in Africa. Westview, Boulder (1988).
82.
Procida, M.A.: Married to the empire: gender, politics and imperialism in India,  1883-1947. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2002).
83.
Rai, S.: Gender and the political economy of development: from nationalism to globalization. Polity, Cambridge (2002).
84.
Mohanty, C.T., Riley, R.L., Pratt, M.B.: Feminism and war: confronting US imperialism. Zed Books, London (2008).
85.
Sangari, K., Vaid, S.: Recasting women: essays in Indian colonial history. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1990).
86.
Peers, D.M., Gooptu, N.: India and the British empire. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012).
87.
Sinha, M.: Gender and Imperialism: Colonial Policy and the Ideology of Moral Imperialism in Late Nineteenth-Century Bengal. In: Changing men: new directions in research on men and masculinity. pp. 217–231. Sage, Newbury Park (1987).
88.
Chaudhuri, N., Strobel, M.: Western women and imperialism: complicity and resistance. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (1992).
89.
Sinha, M.: Colonial masculinity: the ‘manly Englishman’ and the ‘effeminate  Bengali’ in the late nineteenth century. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1995).
90.
Sinha, M.: Giving Masculinity a History: Some Contributions from the Historiography of Colonial India. Gender & History. 11, 445–460 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.00155.
91.
Stoler, A.L.: Making Empire Respectable: The Politics of Race and Sexual Morality in 20th-Century Colonical Cultures. American Ethnologist. 16, 634–660 (1989).
92.
Di Leonardo, M.: Gender at the crossroads of knowledge: feminist anthropology in the  postmodern era. University of California Press, Berkeley (1991).
93.
Stoler, A.: Sexual Affronts and Racial Frontiers: European Identities and the Cultural Politics of Exclusions in Colonial Southeast Asia. Comparative Studies in Society and History. 34, (1992). https://doi.org/10.1017/S001041750001793X.
94.
Stoler, A.L.: Race and the education of desire: Foucault’s History of sexuality and the colonial order of things. Duke University Press, Durham (1995).
95.
Tambe, A., Nair, J., Sinha, M., Chakravarti, U., Uberoi, P.: Colluding Patriarchies: The Colonial Reform of Sexual Relations in India. Feminist Studies. 26, (2000). https://doi.org/10.2307/3178641.
96.
Hansen, K.T.: African encounters with domesticity. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1992).
97.
Twinam, A.: Public lives, private secrets: gender, honor, sexuality and  illegitimacy in colonial Spanish America. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1999).
98.
Waylen, G.: Gender in Third World politics. Open University Press, Buckingham (1996).
99.
Whitehead, A.: Continuities and Discontinuities in Political Constructions of the Working Man in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa: The ‘Lazy Man’ in African Agriculture. European Journal of Development Research. 12, 23–52 (2000).
100.
Wilson, K.: Rethinking the Colonial State: Family, Gender, and Governmentality in Eighteenth-Century British Frontiers. The American Historical Review. 116, 1294–1322 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr.116.5.1294.
101.
Wilson, K.: Race, racism and development: interrogating history, discourse and practice. Zed Books, London (2012).
102.
Woollacott, A.: Gender and empire. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2006).
103.
Liddle, J., Rai, S.: Feminism, imperialism and orientalism: the challenge of the ‘Indian woman’. Women’s History Review. 7, 495–520 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1080/09612029800200185.
104.
Mohanty, C.T.: Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses. Feminist Review. (1988). https://doi.org/10.2307/1395054.
105.
Bissell, M.: Evangelistic Efforts for the Women of India. In: Women and empire, 1750-1939: primary sources on gender and Anglo-imperialism (Vol IV Part 2). pp. 87–89. Routledge, Abingdon, UK (2009).
106.
Kilham, H.: Memoir of the Late Hannah Kilham Chiefly Complied and  her Daughter-in-Law Sarah Biller (1837). In: Women and empire, 1750-1939: primary sources on gender and Anglo-imperialism (Vol IV Part 2). pp. 53–58. Routledge, Abingdon, UK (2009).
107.
Teng, J.E.: The Construction of the ‘Traditional Chinese Woman’ in the Western Academy: A Critical Review. Signs. 22, 115–151 (1996).
108.
Trollope, J.: Dealing with False Prophets. In: Britannia’s daughters: women of the British Empire. pp. 185–199. Pimlico, London (1994).
109.
Wilson, K.: Race, Racism and Development: Interrogating History, Discourse and Practice. In: Ethnic and Racial Studies (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2013.786115.
110.
Wilson, K.: ‘Race’, Gender and Neoliberalism: changing visual representations in development. Third World Quarterly. 32, 315–331 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2011.560471.
111.
Abu-Lughod, L., Yegenoglu, M., Arat, Z., Hoodfar, H., Tucker, J., Moghissi, H., Mir-Hosseini, Z., Kandiyoti, D., Mernissi, F., Ward, R.V.: ‘Orientalism’ and Middle East Feminist Studies. Feminist Studies. 27, (2001). https://doi.org/10.2307/3178451.
112.
Aijaz Ahmad: In theory: classes, nations, literatures. Verso, London (1992).
113.
Ahmed, S.: Strange encounters: embodied others in post-coloniality. Routledge, London (2000).
114.
Cornwall, A.: Readings in gender in Africa. International African Institute, London (2005).
115.
Bhambra, G.K.: Connected sociologies. Bloomsbury, London (2014).
116.
Burke, T.: ‘Fork Up and Smile’: Marketing, Colonial Knowledge and the Female Subject in Zimbabwe. Gender & History. 8, 440–456 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0424.1996.tb00066.x.
117.
Levine, P.: Gender and empire. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2004).
118.
Buruma, I., Margalit, A.: Occidentalism: a short history of anti-Westernism. Atlantic, London (2004).
119.
Sangari, K., Vaid, S.: Recasting women: essays in Indian colonial history. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1990).
120.
Chaudhuri, N., Strobel, M.: Western women and imperialism: complicity and resistance. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (1992).
121.
Chen, Y.: The many dimensions of Chinese feminism. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2011).
122.
Connell, R.: Southern theory: the global dynamics of knowledge in social science. Polity, Cambridge (2007).
123.
Dogra, N.: The Mixed Metaphor of ‘Third World Woman’: gendered representations by international development NGOs. Third World Quarterly. 32, 333–348 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2011.560472.
124.
El-Malik, S.S.: Why Orientalism still matters: Reading ‘casual forgetting’ and ‘active remembering’ as neoliberal forms of contestation in international politics. Review of International Studies. 41, 503–525 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210514000473.
125.
Ghoussoub, M.: Feminism—or the Eternal Masculine—in the Arab World. New Left Review. 161, (1987).
126.
Farr, M., Guégan, X.: The British abroad since the eighteenth century: travellers and tourists, Volume 1. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2013).
127.
Farr, M., Guégan, X.: The British abroad since the eighteenth century: experiencing imperialism, Volume 2. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2013).
128.
Midgley, C.: Gender and imperialism. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1998).
129.
Hammami, R., Rieker, M.: Feminist Orientalism and Orientalist Marxism. New Left Review. 170, (1988).
130.
Henry, M.G.: `Where are you Really from?’: Representation, Identity and Power in the Fieldwork Experiences of a South Asian Diasporic. Qualitative Research. 3, 229–242 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1177/14687941030032005.
131.
Jayawardena, K.: The white woman’s other burden: Western women and South Asia during  British colonial rule. Routledge, New York (1995).
132.
Journal of Postcolonial Writing: Vol 48, No 3.
133.
Kabeer, N., Stark, A., Magnus, E., Sweden. Expert Group on Development Issues: Global perspectives on gender equality: reversing the gaze. Routledge, New York (2008).
134.
Khalid, M.: Gender, orientalism and representations of the ‘Other’ in the War on Terror. Global Change, Peace & Security. 23, 15–29 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/14781158.2011.540092.
135.
Kuehn, J.: A female poetics of empire: from Eliot to Woolf. Routledge, New York (2014).
136.
Kumar, D.: War propaganda and the (AB)uses of women. Feminist Media Studies. 4, 297–313 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/1468077042000309955.
137.
Lazreg, M.: Feminism and Difference: The Perils of Writing as a Woman on Women in Algeria. Feminist Studies. 14, (1988). https://doi.org/10.2307/3178000.
138.
Levine, P.: Naked Truths: Bodies, Knowledge, and the Erotics of Colonial Power. The Journal of British Studies. 52, 5–25 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2012.6.
139.
Lewis, R.: Gendering orientalism: race, femininity and representation. Routledge, London (1996).
140.
Kennedy, M., Lubelska, C., Walsh, V.: Making connections: women’s studies, women’s movements, women’s  lives. Taylor & Francis, London (1993).
141.
MacKenzie, J.M.: Orientalism: history, theory and the arts. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1995).
142.
Marchand, M.H.: The Future of Gender and Development after 9/11: insights from postcolonial feminism and transnationalism. Third World Quarterly. 30, 921–935 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590902959149.
143.
McClintock, A.: Imperial leather: race, gender, and sexuality in the colonial contest. Routledge, New York (1995).
144.
Sangari, K., Vaid, S.: Recasting women: essays in Indian colonial history. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1990).
145.
Nayak, M.: Orientalism and ‘saving’ US state identity after 9/11. International Feminist Journal of Politics. 8, 42–61 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/14616740500415458.
146.
Afshar, H.: Women in the Middle East: perceptions, realities and struggles for  liberation. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1993).
147.
Melman, B.: Women’s Orients--English women and the Middle East, 1718-1918: sexuality, religion, and work. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor (1992).
148.
Mills, S.: Discourses of difference: an analysis of women’s travel writing and  colonialism. Routledge, London (1991).
149.
Miller, J.: Seductions: studies in reading and culture. Virago, London (1990).
150.
Mohanty, C.T., Russo, A., Torres, L.: Third World women and the politics of feminism. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (1991).
151.
Morgan, R.: Sisterhood is global: the international women’s movement anthology. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1985).
152.
Nader, L.: Culture and dignity: dialogues between the Middle East and the West. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, West Sussex, U.K. (2013).
153.
Ong, A.: Colonialism and Modernity: feminist representations of women in non- western societies, http://ccs.ihr.ucsc.edu/inscriptions/volume-34/aihwa-ong/.
154.
Owens, P.: Torture, Sex and Military Orientalism. Third World Quarterly. 31, 1041–1056 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2010.518790.
155.
Said, E.W.: Orientalism. Penguin, London (2003).
156.
Sangari, K., Vaid, S.: Recasting women: essays in Indian colonial history. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick (1990).
157.
Sharify-Funk, M.: Encountering the transnational: women, Islam and the politics of interpretation. Ashgate, Aldershot (2008).
158.
Nelson, C., Grossberg, L.: Marxism and the interpretation of culture. Macmillan Education, Basingstoke (1988).
159.
Stoler, A.L.: Race and the education of desire: Foucault’s History of sexuality and the colonial order of things. Duke University Press, Durham (1995).
160.
Wilson, K.: ‘Race’, Gender and Neoliberalism: changing visual representations in development. Third World Quarterly. 32, 315–331 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2011.560471.
161.
Wright, C.: Representing the ‘Other’: Some Thoughts. Indian Journal of Gender Studies. 4, 83–89 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1177/097152159700400107.
162.
Yoshihara, M.: Embracing the East: white women and American orientalism. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2003).
163.
Young, R.: White mythologies: writing history and the west. Routledge, London (2004).
164.
Zonana, J.: The Sultan and the Slave: Feminist Orientalism and the Structure of ‘Jane Eyre’. Signs. 18, 592–617 (1993).
165.
Gender and Indicators’, http://docs.bridge.ids.ac.uk/vfile/upload/4/document/1105/Indicators_IB_English.pdf.
166.
Gender Indicators: What, Why and How, http://www.oecd.org/dac/gender-development/43041409.pdf.
167.
Liebowitz, D.J., Zingel, S.: Gender Equality Oversimplified: Using CEDAW to Counter the Measurement Obsession’. International Studies Review. 16, 362–389 (2014).
168.
Chant, S.: Re-thinking the ‘Feminization of Poverty’ in Relation to Aggregate Gender Indices. Journal of Human Development. 7, 201–220 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/14649880600768538.
169.
Kabeer, N.: Gender equality and women’s empowerment: A critical analysis of the third millennium development goal 1. Gender & Development. 13, 13–24 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552070512331332273.
170.
Aikman, S., Unterhalter, E.: Beyond Access: Transforming policy and practice for gender equality in education. (2005).
171.
Yamin, A.E., Boulanger, V.M.: Why Global Goals and Indicators Matter: The Experience of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in the Millennium Development Goals. Journal of Human Development and Capabilities. 15, 218–231 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1080/19452829.2014.896322.
172.
Esquivel, V., Sweetman, C.: Gender and the Sustainable Development Goals. Gender & Development. 24, 1–8 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2016.1153318.
173.
Sustainable Development Goals | UNDP, http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/sustainable-development-goals.html.
174.
Agency for Cooperation and Research in Development (ACORD): African Women and Girls at the Grassroots: Their Say on Their World Post 2015, http://www.acordinternational.org/silo/files/acord-gender-report-post-2015-march-2014.pdf, (2014).
175.
Aitchison, C., Henderson, K.: UNICEF and UN women’s evidence gathering to address inequalities in the post-2015 global development agenda: leisure as a site of inequality                              a means of addressing inequality. World Leisure Journal. 55, 193–203 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1080/04419057.2013.782739.
176.
Bardhan, K., Klasen, S.: UNDP’s Gender-Related Indices: A Critical Review. World Development. 27, 985–1010 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0305-750X(99)00035-2.
177.
AWID: Capturing Change in Women’s Realities, https://www.awid.org/publications/capturing-change-womens-realities.
178.
Beetham, G., Demetriades, J.: Feminist Research Methodologies and Development: Overview and Practical Application. Gender and Development. 15, 199–216 (2007).
179.
Bridges, W.P.: Rethinking Gender Segregation and Gender Inequality: Measures and Meanings. Demography. 40, 543–568 (2003).
180.
Cantillon, S., Nolan, B.: Poverty within Households: Measuring Gender Differences Using Nonmonetary Indicators. Feminist Economics. 7, 5–23 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1080/135457001316854692.
181.
Chambers, R.: Whose reality counts?: putting the first last. Intermediate Technology, London (1997).
182.
Chant, S.: The disappearing of ‘smart economics’? The World Development Report 2012 on Gender Equality: Some concerns about the preparatory process and the prospects for paradigm change. Global Social Policy. 12, 198–218 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/1468018112443674.
183.
Corner, L.: From Margins to Mainstream: From Gender Statistics to Engendering Statistical Systems, http://www1.aucegypt.edu/src/engendering/Documents/engendering%20corporate%20governance/Margins2Mainstreamgengerstatistics.pdf.
184.
UN Women - United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women | UN Women Headquarters, http://www.unwomen.org/en.
185.
Cornwall, A.: Whose Voices? Whose Choices? Reflections on Gender and Participatory Development. World Development. 31, 1325–1342 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0305-750X(03)00086-X.
186.
Derbyshire, H.: Gender manual : a practical guide for development policy makers and practitioners, http://pugwash.lib.warwick.ac.uk/record=b2086806.
187.
Derbyshire, H.: Gender manual: a practical guide for development policy makers and practitioners. DFID, London (2002).
188.
Saunders, K.: Feminist post-development thought: rethinking modernity,  post-colonialism & representation. Zed, London (2002).
189.
Elson, D., Cagatay, N.: The Social Content of Macroeconomic Policies. World Development. 28, 1347–1364 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0305-750X(00)00021-8.
190.
Evans, A.: World Development Report 2012: Radical redistribution or just tinkering within the template? Development, suppl. 55, 134–137 (2012).
191.
Gender & Development: Vol 24, No 1.
192.
Woldetsadick, T.G.: Women, famine and the Millennium Development Goals: The Horn of Africa test. Agenda. 26, 33–40 (2012).
193.
Gutierrez, M.: Macro-economics: making gender matter : concepts, policies and  institutional change in developing countries. Zed, London (2003).
194.
Hill, P.S., Huntington, D., Dodd, R., Buttsworth, M.: From Millennium Development Goals to post-2015 sustainable development: sexual and reproductive health and rights in an evolving aid environment. Reproductive Health Matters. 21, 113–124 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(13)42737-4.
195.
Wilkinson, R., Hulme, D.: The Millennium Development Goals and beyond: development after 2015. Routledge, London (2012).
196.
Isaacs-Martin, W.: Cultural idiosyncrasies and religion: Why it is difficult to implement the third Millennium Development Goal. Agenda. 26, 81–90 (2012).
197.
Jackson, C., Pearson, R.: Feminist visions of development: gender, analysis and policy. Routledge, London (1998).
198.
Jackson, C.: Disciplining Gender? World Development. 30, 497–509 (2002).
199.
Journal of Human Development and Capabilities: Vol 15, No 2-3.
200.
Kabeer, N.: Reversed realities: gender hierarchies in development thought. Verso, London (1994).
201.
Chaudhuri, M.: Feminism in India. Zed, London (2005).
202.
Klasen, S., Schuler, D.: Reforming the Gender-Related Development Index and the Gender Empowerment Measure: Implementing Some Specific Proposals. Feminist Economics. 17, 1–30 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/13545701.2010.541860.
203.
Lin, V., L’Orange, H., Silburn, K.: Gender-sensitive indicators: Uses and relevance. International Journal of Public Health. 52, S27–S34 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00038-006-6049-7.
204.
McNulty, S.L.: Barriers to Participation: Exploring Gender in Peru’s Participatory Budget Process. The Journal of Development Studies. 51, 1429–1443 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/00220388.2015.1010155.
205.
Moser, C.O.N.: Gender planning and development: theory, practice and training. Routledge, London (1993).
206.
Moser, caroline: An Introduction to Gender Audit Methodology, https://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/1818.pdf.
207.
Olowu, D.: Gender equality under the Millennium Development Goals: What options for sub-Saharan Africa? Agenda. 26, 104–111 (2012).
208.
Saunders, K.: Feminist post-development thought: rethinking modernity,  post-colonialism & representation. Zed, London (2002).
209.
Blancas Peral, F.J., Domínguez Serrano, M., Guerrero Casas, F.M.: An alternative approach to measuring gender inequality. Journal of Gender Studies. 17, 369–374 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1080/09589230802420102.
210.
Permanyer, I.: The Measurement of Multidimensional Gender Inequality: Continuing the Debate. Social Indicators Research. 95, 181–198 (2010).
211.
Pietilä, H., Vickers, J.: Making women matter: the role of the United Nations. Zed Books, London (1994).
212.
Gender equality and development. World Bank, Washington D.C. (2011).
213.
Sweetman, C.: Gender and the Millennium Development Goals | Oxfam GB | Policy & Practice, http://policy-practice.oxfam.org.uk/publications/gender-and-the-millennium-development-goals-121130.
214.
Syed, J.: Reconstructing gender empowerment. Women’s Studies International Forum. 33, (2010). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2010.03.002.
215.
UN Millennium Project | About the MDGs, http://www.unmillenniumproject.org/goals/index.htm.
216.
UN: A New Global Partnership: Eradicate Poverty and Transform Economies through Sustainable Development, http://www.ifla.org/files/assets/hq/news/documents/high-level-report.pdf.
217.
United Nations Development Fund for Women: Progress of the world’s women 2000. United Nations Development Fund for Women, New York (2000).
218.
Human Development Reports, http://hdr.undp.org/en/2014-report.
219.
Unterhalter, E., North, A.: Responding to the gender and education Millennium Development Goals in South Africa and Kenya: reflections on education rights, gender equality, capabilities and global justice. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education. 41, 495–511 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2011.581516.
220.
Unterhalter, E.: Trade-off, Comparative Evaluation and Global Obligation: Reflections on the Poverty, Gender and Education Millennium Development Goals. Journal of Human Development and Capabilities. 13, 335–351 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/19452829.2012.681296.
221.
Unterhalter, E., Dorward, A.: New MDGs, Development Concepts, Principles and Challenges in a Post-2015 World. Social Indicators Research. 113, 609–625 (2013).
222.
Waring, M.: If women counted: a new feminist economics. Macmillan London, London (1989).
223.
World Develpopment Report 2012 - Full Text, http://econ.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTDEC/EXTRESEARCH/EXTWDRS/EXTWDR2012/0,,contentMDK:22999750~menuPK:8154981~pagePK:64167689~piPK:64167673~theSitePK:7778063,00.html.
224.
World Bank: Opening doors: gender equality and development in the Middle East and North Africa. World Bank, Washington, D.C. (2013).
225.
The Global Gender Gap Report 2013, http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_GenderGap_Report_2013.pdf.
226.
Antrobus, P.: Political strategies and dynamics of women’s organizing and feminist activism. In: The global women’s movement: origins, issues and strategies. pp. 109–136. Zed, London (2004).
227.
Batliwala, S.: Changing Their World: Concepts and Practices of Women’s Movements, https://www.awid.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/changing_their_world_2ed_full_eng.pdf.
228.
Basu, A.: Two faces of protest: contrasting modes of women’s activism in India. University of California Press, Berkeley (1992).
229.
Berry, K.: Disowning dependence: single women’s collective struggle for independence and land rights in northwestern India. Feminist Review. 136–152 (2011).
230.
Chaudhuri, M.: Feminism in India. Zed, London (2005).
231.
Chowdhury, R.: Conditions of Emergence: The Formation of Men’s Rights Groups in Contemporary India. Indian Journal of Gender Studies. 21, 27–53 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1177/0971521513511199.
232.
Gandhi, N., Shah, N.: The issues at stake: theory and practice in the contemporary women’s movement in India. Kali for Women, New Delhi (1992).
233.
Irudayam, A., Mangubhai, J.P., Lee, J.G.: Dalit women speak out: caste, class and gender violence in India. Zubaan, New Delhi (2011).
234.
Kumar, R.: The history of doing: an illustrated account of movements for  women’s rights and feminism in India 1800-1990. Kali for Women, New Delhi (1993).
235.
Kapur, R.: Pink Chaddis and SlutWalk Couture: The Postcolonial Politics of Feminism Lite. Feminist Legal Studies. 20, 1–20 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10691-012-9193-x.
236.
Kapur, R.: Brutalized Bodies and Sexy Dressing on the Indian Street. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 40, (2014).
237.
Liddle, J., Joshi, R.: Daughters of independence: gender, caste and class in India. Zed, London (1986).
238.
Roy, M.S.: Magic Moments of Struggle: Women’s Memory of the Naxalbari Movement in West Bengal, India (1967-75). Indian Journal of Gender Studies. 16, 205–232 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1177/097152150901600203.
239.
Rao, A. ed: Gender & caste. Zed Books, London (2005).
240.
Roy, S.: Melancholic politics and the politics of melancholia: The Indian women’s movement. Feminist Theory. 10, 341–357 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1177/1464700109343257.
241.
Roy, S.: Politics, Passion and Professionalization in Contemporary Indian Feminism. Sociology. 45, 587–602 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1177/0038038511406584.
242.
Sinha, M.: Refashioning Mother India: Feminism and Nationalism in Late-Colonial India. Feminist Studies. 26, (2000). https://doi.org/10.2307/3178643.
243.
Jolly, S., Cornwall, A., Hawkins, K. eds: Women, sexuality and the political power of pleasure. Zed Books, London (2013).
244.
Waldrop, A.: Grandmother, Mother and Daughter: Changing agency of Indian, middle-class women, 1908-2008. Modern Asian Studies. 46, 601–638 (2012).
245.
Cornwall, A., Edström, J., Greig, A.: Men and development: politicizing masculinities. Zed Books, London (2011).
246.
Hernández Castillo, R.A.: The Emergence of Indigenous Feminism in Latin America. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 35, 539–545 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1086/648538.
247.
Rodrigues, C., Prado, M.A.: A History of the Black Women’s Movement in Brazil: Mobilization, Political Trajectory and Articulations with the State. Social Movement Studies. 12, 158–177 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1080/1612197X.2012.697613.
248.
Deere, C.D.: Women’s Land Rights and Rural Social Movements in the Brazilian Agrarian Reform. Journal of Agrarian Change. 3, 257–288 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1111/1471-0366.00056.
249.
Duke, D.: Alzira Rufino’s a casa de cultura de mulher negra as a form of female empowerment: a look at the dynamics of a black women’s organization in Brazil today. Women’s Studies International Forum. 26, 357–368 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1016/S0277-5395(03)00080-3.
250.
Dunford, R.F., Madhok, S.: Vernacular rights cultures and the ‘Right to Have Rights’. Citizenship Studies. 19, 605–619 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2015.1053791.
251.
Sierra, M., Román-Odio, C.: Transnational borderlands in women’s global networks: The making of cultural resistance. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2011).
252.
Cornwall, A., Edwards, J. eds: Feminisms, empowerment and development: changing women’s lives. Zed Books, London (2014).
253.
Htun, M.: Puzzles of Women’s Rights in Brazil. Social Research. 69, 733–751 (2002).
254.
Htun, M., Power, T.J.: Gender, Parties, and Support for Equal Rights in the Brazilian Congress. Latin American Politics and Society. 48, 83–104 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-2456.2006.tb00366.x.
255.
Jennings, L.B., Da Matta, G.B.: Rooted in resistance: women teachers constructing counter‐pedagogies in post‐authoritarian Brazil. Teaching Education. 20, 215–228 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1080/10476210903096047.
256.
Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.
257.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
258.
Jaquette, J.S.: Feminist agendas and democracy in Latin America. Duke University Press, Durham (2009).
259.
Pitanguy, J.: Bridging the local and the global: Feminism in Brazil and the international human rights agenda. Social Research. 69, 805–820 (2002).
260.
Rodrigues, C., Prado, M.A.: A History of the Black Women’s Movement in Brazil: Mobilization, Political Trajectory and Articulations with the State. Social Movement Studies. 12, 158–177 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1080/1612197X.2012.697613.
261.
Stephen, L.: Women and social movements in Latin America: power from below. Latin America Bureau, London (1997).
262.
Zanotti, L.: Resistance and the politics of negotiation: women, place and space among the Kayapó in Amazonia, Brazil. Gender, Place & Culture. 20, 346–362 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2012.674927.
263.
Bhana, D., Mthethwa-Sommers, S.: Feminisms today: Still fighting. Agenda. 24, 2–7 (2010).
264.
Scott, J.W., Kaplan, C., Keates, D.: Transitions, environments, translations: feminisms in international  politics. Routledge, New York (1997).
265.
Dworkin, S.L., Colvin, C., Hatcher, A., Peacock, D.: Men’s Perceptions of Women’s Rights and Changing Gender Relations in South Africa. Gender & Society. 26, 97–120 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/0891243211426425.
266.
Geisler, G.: ‘Parliament is another terrain of struggle’: women, men and politics in South Africa. The Journal of Modern African Studies. 38, 605–630 (2000).
267.
Goetz, A.M., Hassim, S.: No shortcuts to power: African women in politics and policy making. Zed Books, London (2003).
268.
Gouws, A.: Feminism in South Africa today: Have we lost the praxis? Agenda. 24, 13–23 (2010).
269.
Hassim, S.: ‘A Conspiracy of Women’: The Women’s Movement in South Africa’s Transition to Democracy. Social Research. 69, 693–732 (2002).
270.
Hassim, S.: Voices, Hierarchies and Spaces: Reconfiguring the Women’s Movement in Democratic South Africa. Politikon. 32, 175–193 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1080/02589340500353417.
271.
Hassim, S.: Women’s organizations and democracy in South Africa: contesting authority. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison (2006).
272.
West, L.A.: Feminist nationalism. Routledge, New York (1997).
273.
Meer, S.: Experiences of Democracy in South Africa from a Feminist Perspective. Development. 50, 96–103 (2007).
274.
Gouws, A.: (Un)thinking citizenship: feminist debates in contemporary South Africa. Ashgate Pub, Aldershot (2005).
275.
Cornwall, A., Edström, J., Greig, A.: Men and development: politicizing masculinities. Zed Books, London (2011).
276.
Smuts, L.: Coming Out as a Lesbian in Johannesburg, South Africa: Considering Intersecting Identities and Social Spaces. South African Review of Sociology. 42, 23–40 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/21528586.2011.621231.
277.
Tallis, V.: Feminisms, HIV and AIDS: Subverting power, reducing vulnerability. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2012).
278.
Fleschenberg, A.: Gendering democratisation: women as change agents in transition contexts. Recerca: Revista de Pensament i Anàlisi. 185–210 (2010).
279.
Zulu, L.: Role of Women in the Reconstruction and Development of the New Democratic South Africa. Feminist Studies. 24, (1998). https://doi.org/10.2307/3178628.
280.
Baines, E.K.: Body Politics and the Rwandan Crisis. Third World Quarterly. 24, 479–493 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/0143659032000084429.
281.
Bauer, G., Burnet, J.E.: Gender quotas, democracy, and women’s representation in Africa: Some insights from democratic Botswana and autocratic Rwanda. Women’s Studies International Forum. 41, 103–112 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2013.05.012.
282.
Beswick, D.: Managing Dissent in a Post-genocide Environment: The Challenge of Political Space in Rwanda. Development & Change. 41, 225–251 (2010).
283.
Burnet, J.E.: Gender Balance and the Meanings of Women in Governance in Post-Genocide Rwanda. African Affairs. 107, 361–386 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/adn024.
284.
Burnet, J.E.: Women Have Found Respect: Gender Quotas, Symbolic Representation, and Female Empowerment in Rwanda. Politics & Gender. 7, 303–334 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743923X11000250.
285.
Debusscher, P., Ansoms, A.: Gender Equality Policies in Rwanda: Public Relations or Real Transformations? Development & Change. 44, 1111–1134 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.12052.
286.
Devlin, C., Elgie, R.: The Effect of Increased Women’s Representation in Parliament: The Case of Rwanda. Parliamentary Affairs. 61, 237–254 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1093/pa/gsn007.
287.
Buckley-Zistel, S., Stanley, R.: Gender in transitional justice. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2011).
288.
Newbury, C., Baldwin, H.: Aftermath: Women in Postgenocide Rwanda, http://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PNACJ323.pdf.
289.
Ballington, J., Karam, A.M., International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance: Women in parliament: beyond numbers. International IDEA, Stockholm, Sweden (2005).
290.
LGBT Asylum News: Though lesbians suffer in Rwanda, they’re determined to be visible, http://madikazemi.blogspot.co.uk/2010/10/though-lesbians-suffer-in-rwanda-theyre.html.
291.
Chandler, R.M., Fuller, L.K., Wang, L.: Women, war, and violence: Personal perspectives and global activism. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
292.
Chandler, R.M., Fuller, L.K., Wang, L.: Women, war, and violence: Personal perspectives and global activism. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
293.
Uwineza, P., Pearson, E.: Sustaining Women’s  Gains  in  Rwanda:  The Influence of Indigenous Culture and Post-Genocide Politics’, https://www.swaneehunt.com/.
294.
Afshar, H.: Women and politics in the Third World. Routledge, London (1996).
295.
Al-Ali, N., Pratt, N.: Women’s Organizing and the Conflict in Iraq since 2003. Feminist Review. 74–85 (2008).
296.
Ali, S., Coate, K., Wangũi wa Goro: Global feminist politics: identities in a changing world. Routledge, London (2000).
297.
Antrobus, P.: The rise and fall of feminist politics in the Caribbean women’s  movement, 1975-1995. University of the West Indies, Centre for Gender  & Development Studies, Kingston, Jamaica (2000).
298.
Barlow, T.E.: The question of women in Chinese feminism. Duke University Press, Durham (2004).
299.
Basu, A., McGrory, C.E.: The Challenge of local feminisms: women’s movements in global  perspective. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1995).
300.
Beckwith, K.: Beyond compare? Women’s movements in comparative perspective. European Journal of Political Research. 37, 431–468 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.00521.
301.
Bernal, V., Grewal, I.: Theorizing NGOs: states, feminisms, and neoliberalism. Duke University Press, Durham (2014).
302.
Bouvard, M.G.: Revolutionizing motherhood: the mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. Scholarly Resources Inc, Wilmington, Del (1994).
303.
Braig, M., Woelte, S.: Common ground or mutual exclusion?: women’s movements and international relations. Zed Books, London (2002).
304.
Cagna, P., Rao, N.: Feminist mobilisation for policy change on violence against women: insights from Asia. Gender & Development. 24, 277–290 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2016.1194035.
305.
Chen, Y.: The many dimensions of Chinese feminism. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2011).
306.
Nelson, B.J., Chowdhury, N.: Women and politics worldwide. Yale University Press, New Haven (1994).
307.
Cornwall, A., Edwards, J. eds: Feminisms, empowerment and development: changing women’s lives. Zed Books, London (2014).
308.
Cupples, J.: Latin American development. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, London (2013).
309.
Dandavati, A.G.: The women’s movement and the transition to democracy in Chile. P. Lang, New York (1996).
310.
Fallon, K.M.: Democracy and the rise of women’s movements in Sub-Saharan Africa. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2008).
311.
Fluri, J.L.: feminist-nation building in Afghanistan: an examination of the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)                  Original text. Feminist Review. 34–54 (2008).
312.
Castro, M.G., Hallewell, L.: Engendering Powers in Neoliberal Times in Latin America: Reflections from the Left on Feminisms and Feminisms                  Original text. Latin American Perspectives. 28, 17–37 (2001).
313.
Gender & Development: Vol 21, No 1.
314.
Gender & Development: Vol 21, No 2.
315.
Harcourt, W., Escobar, A.: Women and the politics of place. Kumarian Press, Bloomfield, CT (2005).
316.
Harcourt, W.: Body politics in development: critical debates in gender and development. Zed Books, London (2009).
317.
Hemmings, C.: Affective solidarity: Feminist reflexivity and political transformation. Feminist Theory. 13, 147–161 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1177/1464700112442643.
318.
Horn, J.: Gender and Social Movements: Overview Report, http://docs.bridge.ids.ac.uk/vfile/upload/4/document/1401/FULL%20REPORT.pdf, (2013).
319.
Jaquette, J.S.: The Women’s movement in Latin America: participation and democracy. Westview Press, Boulder, Col (1994).
320.
Jayawardena, K.: Feminism and nationalism in the Third World. Zed, London (1986).
321.
Jolly, S., Cornwall, A., Hawkins, K.: Women, sexuality and the political power of pleasure. Zed Books, London (2013).
322.
Kabeer, N.: Reversed realities: gender hierarchies in development thought. Verso, London (1994).
323.
Kabeer, N., Sudarshan, R.M., Milward, K.: Organizing women workers in the informal economy: beyond the weapons of the weak. Zed Books, London (2013).
324.
Krook, M.L., Childs, S.: Women, gender, and politics: a reader. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010).
325.
Kuumba, M.B.: Gender and social movements. AltaMira Press, Walnut Creek, Calif (2001).
326.
Leung, A.S.M.: Feminism in Transition: Chinese Culture, Ideology and the Development of th... Asia Pacific Journal of Management. 20, 359–374 (2003).
327.
Biddlecom, A.E.: African Feminism: The Politics of Survival in Sub-Saharan Africa. Population & Development Review. 24, 405–405 (1998). https://doi.org/10.2307/2807991.
328.
Moghadam, V.M.: Globalizing women: transnational feminist networks. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2005).
329.
Mohammed, P., Shepherd, C.: Gender in Caribbean development: papers presented at the inaugural  seminar of the University of the West Indies Women and Development  Studies Project. University of the West Indies, Mona (1988).
330.
Molyneux, M.: Mobilization without Emancipation? Women’s Interests, the State, and Revolution in Nicaragua. Feminist Studies. 11, (1985). https://doi.org/10.2307/3177922.
331.
Nash, J.C.: Social movements: an anthropological reader. Blackwell Pub, Malden, MA (2005).
332.
Cornwall, A., International African Institute: Readings in gender in Africa. Indiana University Press, Bloomington (2005).
333.
Predelli, L.N., Halsaa, B., Thun, C., Sandu, A.: Majority-minority relations in contemporary women’s movements: Strategic sisterhood. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2012).
334.
Palmieri, S.: Sympathetic advocates: male parliamentarians sharing responsibility for gender equality. Gender & Development. 21, 67–80 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2013.767501.
335.
Radcliffe, S.A., Westwood, S.: ‘Viva’: women and popular protest in Latin America. Routledge, London (1993).
336.
Bhavnani, K.-K., Foran, J., Kurian, P.A.: Feminist futures: re-imagining women, culture and development. Zed Books, London (2003).
337.
Ricciutelli, L., Miles, A.R., McFadden, M.: Feminist politics, activism and vision: local and global challenges. Inanna Publications and Education, Toronto (2004).
338.
Rowbotham, S.: Women in movement: feminism and social action. Routledge, New York (1992).
339.
Rai, S.: International perspectives on gender and democratisation. Macmillan Press, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2000).
340.
Sinha, M., Guy, D.J., Woollacott, A.: Feminisms and internationalism. Blackwell, Oxford (1999).
341.
Standing, K., Parker, S., Bista, S.: Grassroots responses to violence against women and girls in post-earthquake Nepal: lessons from the field. Gender & Development. 24, 187–204 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2016.1194562.
342.
Stephen, L.: Women and social movements in Latin America: power from below. Latin America Bureau, London (1997).
343.
Tamale, S.: When hens begin to crow: gender and parliamentary politics in Uganda. Westview Press, Boulder, Colo (1999).
344.
Tripp, A.M.: Women & politics in Uganda. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wis (2000).
345.
Tripp, A.M., Kwesiga, J.C.: The women’s movement in Uganda: history, challenges, and prospects. Fountain Publishers, Kampala (2002).
346.
Tripp, A.M.: African women’s movements: transforming political landscapes. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2009).
347.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
348.
Zheng, W., Zhang, Y.: Global Concepts, Local Practices: Chinese Feminism since the Fourth UN Conference on Women                  Original text. Feminist Studies. 36, 40–70 (2010).
349.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
350.
Zulver, J.: High-risk feminism in El Salvador: women’s mobilisation in violent times. Gender & Development. 24, 171–185 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2016.1200883.
351.
Reid-Henry, S.: US economist Walt Rostow and his influence on post-1945 development | Simon Reid-Henry | Global development | The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2012/oct/08/us-economist-walt-rostow-development.
352.
Reid-Henry, S.: Do resource extraction and the legacy of colonialism keep poor countries poor? | Simon Reid-Henry | Global development | The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2012/oct/22/resource-extraction-colonialism-legacy-poor-countries.
353.
Reid-Henry, S.: Neoliberalism’s ‘trade not aid’ approach to development ignored past lessons | Simon Reid-Henry | Global development | The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2012/oct/30/neoliberalism-approach-development-ignored-past-lessons.
354.
Bandarage, A.: Women in Development: Liberalism, Marxism and Marxist-Feminism. Development and change. 495–515 (1984).
355.
Beneria, L., Sen, G.: Class and Gender Inequalities and Women’s Role in Economic Development: Theoretical and Practical Implications. Feminist Studies. 8, (1982). https://doi.org/10.2307/3177584.
356.
Boserup, E.: Woman’s role in economic development. Earthscan, London (2007).
357.
Chant, S., Sweetman, C.: Fixing women or fixing the world? ‘Smart economics’, efficiency approaches, and gender equality in development. Gender & Development. 20, 517–529 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2012.731812.
358.
Esquivel, V.: What is a transformative approach to care, and why do we need it? Gender & Development. 22, 423–439 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2014.963303.
359.
Rai, S., Waylen, G., Elson, D., Pearson, R.: New frontiers in feminist political economy. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, London (2014).
360.
Oberhauser, A.M.: Global perspectives on gender and space : engaging feminism and development. , Routledge 2014.
361.
Deere, C.D., Antrobus, P.: In the shadows of the sun: Caribbean development alternatives and U.S. policy. Westview Press, Boulder (1990).
362.
Mohammed, P., Shepherd, C.: Gender in Caribbean development: papers presented at the inaugural  seminar of the University of the West Indies Women and Development  Studies Project. University of the West Indies, Mona, Jamaica (1988).
363.
Boserup, E.: Women’s role in economic development. George Allen and Unwin Ltd, London (1971).
364.
Buvinić, M., Lycette, M.A., McGreevey, W.P.: Women and poverty in the Third World. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (1983).
365.
Buvinić, M.: Projects for women in the third world: Explaining their misbehavior. World Development. 14, 653–664 (1986). https://doi.org/10.1016/0305-750X(86)90130-0.
366.
Charlton, S.E.M., Everett, J.M., Staudt, K.A.: Women, the state, and development. State University of New York Press, Albany (1989).
367.
Crewe, E., Harrison, E.: Whose development?: an ethnography of aid. Zed Books, London (1998).
368.
Gordon, S.C., Commonwealth Secretariat. Women and Development Programme: Ladies in Limbo: the fate of women’s bureaux. Commonwealth Secretariat, London (1984).
369.
Gutierrez, M.: Macro-economics: making gender matter : concepts, policies and  institutional change in developing countries. Zed, London (2003).
370.
Jaquette, J.S.: Women and Modernization Theory: A Decade of Feminist Criticism. World Politics. 34, 267–284 (1982). https://doi.org/10.2307/2010265.
371.
Tinker, I.: Persistent inequalities: women and world development. Oxford University Press, New York (1990).
372.
Wallace, R.A.: Feminism and sociological theory. Sage, Newbury Park, Calif (1989).
373.
Kabeer, N.: Reversed realities: gender hierarchies in development thought. Verso, London (1994).
374.
Kabeer, N.: Same Realities, Different Windows: Structuralist Perspectives on Women and Development. In: Reversed realities: gender hierarchies in development thought. pp. 40–68. Verso, London (1994).
375.
Larrain, J.: Theories of Development: Capitalism, Colonialism and Dependency. Wiley, Hoboken (2013).
376.
Larraín, J.: Theories of development: capitalism, colonialism and dependency. Polity, Cambridge (1989).
377.
Mcilwaine, C., Datta, K.: From Feminising to Engendering Development. Gender, Place & Culture. 10, 369–382 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369032000155564.
378.
Mosser, C.: Gender planning in the third world: Meeting practical and strategic gender needs.
379.
Moser, C.O.N.: Gender planning and development: theory, practice and training. Routledge, London (1993).
380.
Mukhopadhyay, M.: Silver shackles: women and development in India. Oxfam, Oxford (1984).
381.
Nelson, N.: African women in the development process. Cass, London (1981).
382.
Allen, T., Thomas, A., Open University: Poverty and development into the 21st century. the Open University in association with Oxford University  Press, Oxford (2000).
383.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
384.
Rogers, B.: The domestication of women: discrimination in developing societies. Tavistock, London (1981).
385.
Rostow, W.W.: The stages of economic growth: a non-communist manifesto. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1990).
386.
Schrijvers, J., Maharaj, N.: The violence of ‘development’: a choice for intellectuals. International Books for the Institute for  Development Research, Utrecht (1993).
387.
Boneparth, E.: Women, power, and policy. Pergamon Press, New York (1982).
388.
Tinker, I.: Persistent inequalities: women and world development. Oxford University Press, New York (1990).
389.
Visvanathan, N., Duggan, L., Nisonoff, L., Wiegersma, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Zed Books, London (1997).
390.
Waylen, G.: Gender in Third World politics. Open University Press, Buckingham (1996).
391.
Waring, M.: If women counted: a new feminist economics. Macmillan London, London (1989).
392.
Bernstein, H.: The Food question: profits versus people? Earthscan, London (1990).
393.
Oberhauser, A.M., Johnston-Anumonwo, I.: Global perspectives on gender and space: engaging feminism and development. Routledge, New York (2014).
394.
Bahramitash, R.: Liberation from liberalization: gender and globalization in Southeast Asia. Zed Books, London (2005).
395.
BERGERON, S.: The Post-Washington Consensus and Economic Representations of Women in Development at the World Bank.
396.
Brym, R.J., Chung, S., Dulmage, S., Farahat, C., Greenberg, M., Ho, M., Housein, K., Kulik, D., Lau, M., Maginley, O., Nercessian, A., Blanc, E.R.L., Sacher, A., Sachewsky, N., Sadovsky, A., Singh, S., Sivananthan, S., Toller, N., Vossoughi, S., Weger, K., Wu, T.: In Faint Praise of the World Bank’s Gender Development Policy. Canadian Journal of Sociology / Cahiers canadiens de sociologie. 30, (2005). https://doi.org/10.2307/4146159.
397.
Calkin, S.: Feminism, interrupted? Gender and development in the era of ‘Smart Economics’. Progress in Development Studies. 15, 295–307 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1177/1464993415592737.
398.
Elias, J.: Davos Woman to the Rescue of Global Capitalism: Postfeminist Politics and Competitiveness Promotion at the World Economic Forum. International Political Sociology. 7, 152–169 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1111/ips.12015.
399.
Rai, S., Waylen, G., Elson, D., Pearson, R.: New frontiers in feminist political economy. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, London (2014).
400.
Englert, B., Daley, E.: Women’s land rights & privatization in eastern Africa. James Currey, Oxford (2008).
401.
Griffin, P.: Gendering the World Bank: neoliberalism and the gendered foundations of global governance. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2009).
402.
Jackson, C., European Association of Development Research and Training Institutes: Men at work: labour, masculinities, development. F. Cass in association with European Association of  Development Research and Training Institutes, Bonn, London (2001).
403.
Kaplan, S.B.: Globalization and Austerity Politics in Latin America. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2013).
404.
Kelbert, A., Hossain, N.: Poor Man’s Patriarchy: Gender Roles and Global Crises. IDS Bulletin. 45, 20–28 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1111/1759-5436.12064.
405.
Madhok, S.: A Limited Women’s Empowerment: Politics, the State, and Development in Northwest India                  Original text. Women’s Studies Quarterly. 31, 154–173 (2003).
406.
Madhok, S., Rai, S.M.: Agency, Injury, and Transgressive Politics in Neoliberal Times. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 37, 645–669 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1086/662939.
407.
Marchand, M.H., Runyan, A.S.: Gender and global restructuring: sightings, sites, and resistances. Routledge, London (2011).
408.
Oberhauser, A.M., Johnston-Anumonwo, I.: Global perspectives on gender and space: engaging feminism and development. Routledge, New York (2014).
409.
Rai, S., Waylen, G., Elson, D., Pearson, R.: New frontiers in feminist political economy. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, London (2014).
410.
Rankin, K.N.: Governing development: neoliberalism, microcredit, and rational economic woman. Economy and Society. 30, 18–37 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1080/03085140020019070.
411.
Razavi, S.: Shifting burdens: gender and agrarian change under neoliberalism. Kumarian Press, Bloomfield, CT (2002).
412.
Razavi, S., Hassim, S.: Gender and social policy in a global context: uncovering the gendered structure of ‘the social’. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2006).
413.
Staudt, K.A.: Women, international development, and politics: the bureaucratic  mire. Temple University Press, Philadelphia, Pa (1997).
414.
Evans, J.: Feminism and political theory. Sage, London (1986).
415.
Visvanathan, N., Duggan, L., Nisonoff, L., Wiegersma, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Zed Books, London (1997).
416.
Wilson, K.: Race, racism and development: interrogating history, discourse and practice. Zed Books, London (2012).
417.
Madhok, S., Phillips, A., Wilson, K.: Gender, agency and coercion. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2013).
418.
Amin, S., Bush, R.: An interview with Samir Amin. Review of African Political Economy. 41, S108–S114 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1080/03056244.2014.992624.
419.
Beneria, L., Sen, G.: Accumulation, Reproduction, and ‘Women’s Role in Economic Development’: Boserup Revisited                  Original text. Signs. 7, 279–298 (1981).
420.
Benería, L.: Women and development: the sexual division of labor in rural societies. Praeger, New York, N.Y. (1982).
421.
Visvanathan, N., Duggan, L., Nisonoff, L., Wiegersma, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Zed Books, London (1997).
422.
Bozzoli, B.: Marxism, Feminism and South African Studies. Journal of Southern African Studies. 9, 139–171 (1983).
423.
Chang, H.-J.: Kicking away the ladder: development strategy in historical perspective. Anthem, London (2002).
424.
Chapkis, W., Enloe, C.H.: Of common cloth: women in the global textile industry. Transnational Institute, Amsterdam (1983).
425.
Chew, S.C., Lauderdale, P.: Theory and methodology of world development: The writings of Andre Gunder Frank. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2010).
426.
Custers, P.: Capital accumulation and women’s labour in Asian economies. Zed, London (1997).
427.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
428.
Elson, D.: Male bias in the development process. Manchester University Press, Manchester (1991).
429.
Elson, D., Pearson, R.: ‘Nimble Fingers Make Cheap Workers’: An Analysis of Women’s Employment in Third World Export Manufacturing. Feminist Review. (1981). https://doi.org/10.2307/1394761.
430.
Visvanathan, N., Duggan, L., Nisonoff, L., Wiegersma, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Zed Books, London (1997).
431.
Frank, A.G.: Capitalism and underdevelopment in Latin America: historical studies of Chile and Brazil. Penguin, Harmondsworth (1971).
432.
Frank, A.G.: Latin America: underdevelopment or revolution: essays on the  development of underdevelopment and the immediate enemy. Monthly Review Press, New York (1969).
433.
Manushi Trust.: Manushi. Sivanandan Collection of the Institute of Race Relations.
434.
Marchand, M.H., Parpart, J.L.: Feminism / postmodernism / development. Routledge, London (1995).
435.
Ward, K.B.: Women workers and global restructuring. ILR Press, Ithaca, NY (1990).
436.
Larraín, J.: Theories of development: capitalism, colonialism and dependency. Polity, Cambridge (1989).
437.
Latt, S.S.W.: More than Culture, Gender, and Class. Critical Asian Studies. 43, 531–550 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/14672715.2011.623521.
438.
Leacock, E.B., Safa, H.I.: Women’s work: development and the division of labor by gender. Bergin & Garvey, South Hadley, Mass (1986).
439.
Visvanathan, N., Duggan, L., Nisonoff, L., Wiegersma, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Zed Books, London (1997).
440.
Mies, M., International Labour Office, World Employment Programme: The lace makers of Narsapur: Indian housewives produce for the world market. Zed, London (1982).
441.
Mies, M., Werlhof, C. von, Bennholdt-Thomsen, V.: Women: the last colony. Zed, London (1988).
442.
Mies, M.: Patriarchy and accumulation on a world scale: women in the international division of labour. Zed, London (1998).
443.
Mitter, S.: Common fate, common bond: women in the global economy. Pluto, London (1986).
444.
Hafkin, N.J., Bay, E.G.: Women in Africa: studies in social and economic change. Stanford University Press, Stanford (1976).
445.
Nash, J.C., Safa, H.I.: Sex and class in Latin America: women’s perspectives on politics,  economics and the family in the Third World. J. F. Bergin Publishers, Brooklyn, N.Y (1980).
446.
Nash, J.C., Fernández-Kelly, M.P.: Women, men, and the international division of labor. State University of New York Press, Albany (1983).
447.
Pyle, J.L.: Globalization and the increase in transnational care work: The flip side. Globalizations. 3, 297–315 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/14747730600869995.
448.
Rai, S.: Gender and the political economy of development: from nationalism to globalization. Polity, Cambridge (2002).
449.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
450.
Rathgeber, E.M.: WID, WAD, GAD: Trends in Research and Practice. The Journal of Developing Areas. 24, 489–502 (1990).
451.
Nash, J.C., Safa, H.I.: Sex and class in Latin America: women’s perspectives on politics,  economics and the family in the Third World. J. F. Bergin Publishers, Brooklyn, N.Y (1980).
452.
Stichter, S., Parpart, J.L.: Women, employment and the family in the international division of  labour. Macmillan, London (1990).
453.
Saffioti, H.I.B.: Women, Mode of Production, and Social Formations. Latin American Perspectives. 4, 27–37 (1977).
454.
Saffioti, H.I.B.: Women in class society. Monthly Review Press, New York (1978).
455.
Sen, G., Grown, C., Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (Project): Development, crises and alternative visions: Third World women’s  perspectives. Earthscan, London (1988).
456.
Scott, C.V.: Gender and development: rethinking modernization and dependency  theory. Rienner, Boulder, Colo (1995).
457.
Visvanathan, N., Duggan, L., Nisonoff, L., Wiegersma, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Zed Books, London (1997).
458.
Young, K., Wolkowitz, C., McCullagh, R.: Of marriage and the market: women’s subordination in international perspective. CSE Books, London (1981).
459.
Reiter, R.R.: Toward an Anthropology of Women. , Aakbar books, 2011.
460.
Reid-Henry, S.: Arturo Escobar: a post-development thinker to be reckoned with | Simon Reid-Henry | Global development | The Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2012/nov/05/arturo-escobar-post-development-thinker.
461.
Drinot, P. ed: Peru in theory. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, NY (2014).
462.
Leach, M.: Earth Mother Myths and Other Ecofeminist Fables: How a Strategic Notion Rose and Fell. Development & Change. 38, 67–85 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7660.2007.00403.x.
463.
Agarwal, B.: The Gender and Environment Debate: Lessons from India. Feminist Studies. 18, (1992). https://doi.org/10.2307/3178217.
464.
Jolly, S., Cornwall, A., Hawkins, K.: Women, sexuality and the political power of pleasure. Zed Books, London (2013).
465.
Escobar, Arturo: Beyond the Search for a Paradigm? Post-Development and beyond. Development, suppl. ‘Past’, ‘Post’ and ‘Future’ Development. 43, 11–14.
466.
Griffin, P.: Gendering the World Bank: neoliberalism and the gendered foundations of global governance. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2009).
467.
Nzomo, M.: Women and Democratization Struggles in Africa: What relevance to postmodernist discourse? In: Feminism / postmodernism / development. pp. 131–141. Routledge, London (1995).
468.
Harcourt, W., Nelson, I.L. eds: Practising feminist political ecologies: Moving beyond the ‘green economy’. Zed Books, London (2015).
469.
Agarwal, B.: Environmental Action, Gender Equity and Women’s Participation. Development and Change. 28, 1–44 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-7660.00033.
470.
Agarwal, B.: A field of one’s own: gender and land rights in South Asia. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994).
471.
Agarwal, B.: Rural Women, Poverty and Natural Resources: Sustenance, Sustainability and Struggle for Change                  Original text. Economic and Political Weekly. 24, (1989).
472.
Agarwal, B.: Structures of patriarchy: state, community and household in  modernising Asia. Zed, London (1988).
473.
Bandarage, A.: Women, population and global crisis: a political-economic analysis. Zed, London (1996).
474.
Mies, M., Bennholdt-Thomsen, V.: The subsistence perspective: beyond the globalized economy. Zed Books, New York (1999).
475.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
476.
O’Neill, K.: The environment and international relations. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2009).
477.
Chae, Y.: Postcolonial ecofeminism in Arundhati Roy’s. Journal of Postcolonial Writing. 51, 519–530 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/17449855.2015.1070010.
478.
Cochrane, R.: Rural poverty and impoverished theory: Cultural populism, ecofeminism, and global justice. Journal of Peasant Studies. 34, 167–206 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/03066150701516674.
479.
Dankelman, I., Davidson, J., International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources: Women and environment in the Third World: alliance for the future. Earthscan in association with IUCN, London (1988).
480.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
481.
Fisher, J.: For Her It’s the Big Issues: Putting Women at the Centre of Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene, https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/dspace-jspui/bitstream/2134/9970/20/wsscc_for_her_its_the_big_issue_evidence_report_2006_en.pdf.
482.
Gaard, G.: Ecofeminism Revisited: Rejecting Essentialism and Re-Placing Species in a Material Feminist Environmentalism, http://0-literature.proquest.com.pugwash.lib.warwick.ac.uk/pageImage.do?ftnum=2507765071&fmt=page&area=criticism&journalid=21517363&articleid=R04690746&pubdate=2011.
483.
Gaard, G.: Ecofeminism and climate change. Women’s Studies International Forum. 49, 20–33 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wsif.2015.02.004.
484.
Harcourt, W., Society for International Development: Feminist perspectives on sustainable development. Zed Books in association with the Society for International  Development, London (1994).
485.
Harcourt, W.: Women reclaiming sustainable livelihoods: Spaces lost, spaces gained. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2012).
486.
Jackson, C.: Women/nature or gender/history? A critique of ecofeminist ‘development’. Journal of Peasant Studies. 20, 389–418 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1080/03066159308438515.
487.
Kabeer, N.: Reversed realities: gender hierarchies in development thought. Verso, London (1994).
488.
Kaijser, A., Kronsell, A.: Climate change through the lens of intersectionality.
489.
Kurian, P.A.: Engendering the environment?: gender in the World Bank’s environmental policies. Ashgate, Aldershot (2000).
490.
Crush, J.: Power of development. Routledge, London (1995).
491.
Masika, R., Joekes, S.: Environmentally Sustainable Development and Poverty: A Gender Analysis, http://www.bridge.ids.ac.uk/sites/bridge.ids.ac.uk/files/reports/re52.pdf.
492.
Mellor, M.: Breaking the boundaries: towards a feminist green socialism. Virago, London (1992).
493.
Merchant, C.: The death of nature: women, ecology, and the scientific revolution. Harper, San Francisco (1990).
494.
Mies, M., Shiva, V.: Ecofeminism. Zed, London (1993).
495.
Molyneux, M., Steinberg, D.L., Mies, M., Shiva, V.: Mies and Shiva’s ‘Ecofeminism’: A New Testament? Feminist Review. (1995). https://doi.org/10.2307/1395330.
496.
Moore, N.: The Rise and Rise of Ecofeminism as a Development Fable: A Response to Melissa Leach’s ‘Earth Mothers and Other Ecofeminist Fables: How a Strategic Notion Rose and Fell’. Development & Change. 39, 461–475 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7660.2008.00488.x.
497.
Moore, N.: Eco/feminism and rewriting the ending of feminism: From the Chipko movement to Clayoquot Sound. Feminist Theory. 12, 3–21 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1177/1464700110390592.
498.
NANDA,M: IS MODERN SCIENCE A WESTERN, PATRIARCHAL MYTH?, http://pugwash.lib.warwick.ac.uk/record=b2090885.
499.
Hennessy, R., Ingraham, C.: Materialist feminism: a reader in class, difference, and women’s lives. Routledge, New York (1997).
500.
NANDA,M: WHO NEEDS POST-DEVELOPMENT?, http://pugwash.lib.warwick.ac.uk/record=b2090888.
501.
Saunders, K.: Feminist post-development thought: rethinking modernity,  post-colonialism & representation. Zed, London (2002).
502.
Nhanenge, J.: Ecofeminism: towards integrating the concerns of women, poor people, and nature into development. University Press of America, Inc, Lanham, Maryland (2011).
503.
Nixon, R.: Slow violence and the environmentalism of the poor. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2011).
504.
Pandey, A.: Globalization and ecofeminism in the South: keeping the ‘Third World’ alive.
505.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
506.
Rocheleau, D., Thomas-Slayter, B.P., Wangari, E.: Feminist political ecology: global issues and local experience. Routledge, London (1996).
507.
Shiva, V.: Staying alive: women, ecology and development. Zed, London (1989).
508.
Salleh, A.: Ecofeminism as politics: nature, Marx and the postmodern. Zed, London (1997).
509.
Sontheimer, S.A.: Women and the environment: a reader : crisis and development in the  Third World. Earthscan Publications, London (1991).
510.
Sinith Sittirak: The daughters of development: women in a changing environment. Zed, London (1998).
511.
Sultana, F.: Gendering Climate Change: Geographical Insights.
512.
Thomas-Slayter, B.P., Rocheleau, D.E., Asamba, I.: Gender, environment, and development in Kenya: a grassroots  perspective. Lynne Rienner, Boulder (1995).
513.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP): Women and the Environment - United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=468&ArticleID=4488&l=en.
514.
Venkateswaran, S., Venkateswaran, S.: Environment, development and the gender gap. Sage Publications, New Delhi (1995).
515.
Marchand, M.H., Parpart, J.L.: Feminism / postmodernism / development. Routledge, London (1995).
516.
Nussbaum, M.C., Glover, J.: Women, culture and development: a study of human capabilities. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1995).
517.
Bhavnani, K.-K., Foran, J., Kurian, P.A.: Feminist futures: re-imagining women, culture and development. Zed Books, London (2003).
518.
Saunders, K.: Feminist post-development thought: rethinking modernity,  post-colonialism & representation. Zed, London (2002).
519.
Nussbaum, M.C., Glover, J.: Women, culture and development: a study of human capabilities. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1995).
520.
Chua, P., Bhavnani, K.-K., Foran, J.: Women, culture, development: a new paradigm for development studies? Ethnic and Racial Studies. 23, 820–841 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870050110913.
521.
Barrios de Chungara, D., Viezzer, M., Ortiz, V.: Let me speak!: testimony of Domitila, a woman of the Bolivian mines. Stage 1, London.
522.
Cornwall, A., Edström, J., Greig, A.: Men and development: politicizing masculinities. Zed Books, London (2011).
523.
Cuny, M.-T., Rambali, P., Phoolan Devi: I, Phoolan Devi: the autobiography of India’s bandit queen. Warner, London (1997).
524.
Dirie, W., Miller, C.: Desert flower: the extraordinary journey of a desert nomad. Virago, London (2001).
525.
Escobar, A.: Latin America at a Crossroads: Alternative Modernizations, Post-liberalism, or Post-development?
526.
Faille, D. della: Discourse analysis in international development studies: Mapping some contemporary contributions. Journal of Multicultural Discourses. 6, 215–235 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/17447143.2011.594512.
527.
Felski, R.: Feminism, Postmodernism, and the Critique of Modernity. Cultural Critique. (1989). https://doi.org/10.2307/1354268.
528.
Fraser, N.: Unruly practices: power, discourse and gender in contemporary social theory. Polity, Cambridge (1989).
529.
Grant, R., Newland, K.: Gender and international relations. Open University Press in association with Millennium: Journal of International Studies, Milton Keynes (1991).
530.
Nicholson, L.J.: Feminism/postmodernism. Routledge, New York (1990).
531.
jackson, S.: WHY A MATERIALIST FEMINISM IS (STILL) POSSIBLE— AND NECESSARY, http://0-ac.els-cdn.com.pugwash.lib.warwick.ac.uk/S027753950100187X/1-s2.0-S027753950100187X-main.pdf?_tid=4310b1d2-ed1b-11e6-8971-00000aab0f6c&acdnat=1486461382_bccc9be8b1d63f5162031fe1a834b13c.
532.
Kandiyoti, D.: Bargaining with Patriarchy. Gender and Society. 2, 274–290 (1988).
533.
Bhavnani, K.-K., Foran, J., Kurian, P.A.: Feminist futures: re-imagining women, culture and development. Zed Books, London (2003).
534.
Women’s Studies International Forum.
535.
Saunders, K.: Feminist post-development thought: rethinking modernity,  post-colonialism & representation. Zed, London (2002).
536.
Lovibond, S.: Feminism and Postmodernism. New Left Review. 178, (1989).
537.
Marchand, M.H., Parpart, J.L.: Feminism / postmodernism / development. Routledge, London (1995).
538.
McNay, L.: Foucault and feminism: power, gender and the self. Polity Press, Cambridge (1992).
539.
Menchú, R., Burgos-Debray, E.: I, Rigoberta Menchú: an Indian woman in Guatemala. Verso, London (2009).
540.
Mernissi, F.: Dreams of trespass: tales of a harem girlhood. Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass (1994).
541.
Mohanty, C.T.: "Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist Solidarity through Anticapitalist Struggles. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 28, (2003).
542.
Momsen, J.H., Kinnaird, V.: Different places, different voices: gender and development in  Africa, Asia and Latin America. Routledge, London (1993).
543.
Murdock, D.F.: Neoliberalism, Gender, and Development: Institutionalizing ‘Post-Feminism’ in Medellín, Colombia. Women’s Studies Quarterly. 31, 129–153 (2003).
544.
Nussbaum, M.C.: Human Functioning and Social Justice: In Defense of Aristotelian Essentialism. Political Theory. 20, 202–246 (1992).
545.
Visvanathan, N.: The women, gender and development reader. Fernwood Pub, Halifax (2011).
546.
Saunders, K.: Feminist post-development thought: rethinking modernity,  post-colonialism & representation. Zed, London (2002).
547.
Spivak, G.C.: In other worlds: essays in cultural politics. Methuen, New York (1987).
548.
Marchand, M.H., Parpart, J.L.: Feminism / postmodernism / development. Routledge, London (1995).
549.
Weedon, C.: Feminist practice and poststructuralist theory. Blackwell, Oxford (1987).
550.
Wilson, K.: Race, racism and development: interrogating history, discourse and practice. Zed Books, London (2012).
551.
Wolf, M.: A thrice-told tale: feminism, postmodernism, and ethnographic responsibility. Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif (1992).
552.
Zalewski, M.: Feminism after postmodernism: theorising through practice. Routledge, London (2000).
553.
Andrews, N., Bawa, S., Andrews, N., Bawa, S.: A Post-development Hoax? (Re)-examining the Past, Present and Future of Development Studies. Third World Quarterly. 35, 922–938 (2014).
554.
Friedman, E.: Women’s Human Rights: The Emergence of a Movement. In: Peters, J.S. and Wolper, A. (eds.) Women’s rights, human rights: international feminist perspectives. pp. 18–35. Routledge, London (1995).
555.
Cornwall, A., Nyamu-Musembi, C.: Why Rights, Why Now? Reflections on the Rise of Rights in International Development Discourse. IDS Bulletin. 36, 9–18 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1759-5436.2005.tb00174.x.
556.
Reilly, N.: Women’s Human Rights Advocacy. In: Women’s human rights: seeking gender justice in a globalizing age. pp. 1–21. Polity, Cambridge (2009).
557.
Anderson, K.: Violence against Women: State Responsibilities in International Human Rights Law to Address Harmful Masculinities. Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights. 26, 173–198 (2008).
558.
Chua, L.J., Gilbert, D.: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Minorities in Transition: LGBT Rights and Activism in Myanmar. Human Rights Quarterly. 37, 1–28 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1353/hrq.2015.0016.
559.
Hellum, A., Aasen, H.S. eds: Women’s human rights: CEDAW in international, regional, and national law. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2013).
560.
Sheill, K.: Sexual Rights are Human Rights: But How Can We Convince the United Nations? IDS Bulletin. 37, 40–45 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1759-5436.2006.tb00300.x.
561.
Weldon, S.L., Htun, M.: Feminist mobilisation and progressive policy change: why governments take action to combat violence against women. Gender & Development. 21, 231–247 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1080/13552074.2013.802158.
562.
Benedek, W., Kisaakye, E.M., Oberleitner, G.: The human rights of women: international instruments and African  experiences. Zed Books, London (2002).
563.
Banda, F.: Women, law and human rights: an African perspective. Hart, Oxford (2005).
564.
Barak-Erez, D., Gross, A.M.: Exploring social rights: between theory and practice. Hart, Oxford (2007).
565.
Bradshaw, S.: Is the rights focus the right focus? Nicaraguan responses to the rights agenda. Third World Quarterly. 27, 1329–1341 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590600933693.
566.
Benedek, W., Kisaakye, E.M., Oberleitner, G.: The human rights of women: international instruments and African  experiences. Zed Books, London (2002).
567.
Burnett, P., Karmali, S., Manji, F., Solidarity for African Women’s Rights: Grace, tenacity and eloquence: the struggle for women’s rights in Africa. Fahamu, Oxford (2007).
568.
Cook, R.J.: Human rights of women: national and international perspectives. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1994).
569.
Carmona, M.S., Donald, K.: What does care have to do with human rights? Analysing the impact on women’s rights and gender equality.
570.
Cook, R.J.: Human rights of women: national and international perspectives. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1994).
571.
Jolly, S., Cornwall, A., Hawkins, K.: Women, sexuality and the political power of pleasure. Zed Books, London (2013).
572.
Cornwall, A., Nyamu-Musembi, C.: Putting the ‘rights‐based approach’ to development into perspective. Third World Quarterly. 25, 1415–1437 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/0143659042000308447.
573.
Cornwall, A., Molyneux, M.: The Politics of Rights—Dilemmas for Feminist Praxis: an introduction. Third World Quarterly. 27, 1175–1191 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590600933255.
574.
Cornwall, A., Corrêa, S., Jolly, S.: Development with a body: sexuality, human rights and development. Zed Books, London (2008).
575.
Dunford, R.F., Madhok, S.: Vernacular rights cultures and the ‘Right to Have Rights’. Citizenship Studies. 19, 605–619 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2015.1053791.
576.
Edwards, A.: Violence against women under international human rights law. Cambridge University Press, New York (2011).
577.
Molyneux, M., Razavi, S.: Gender justice, development, and rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2002).
578.
Elson, D., United Nations Development Fund for Women: Budgeting for women’s rights: monitoring government budgets for compliance with CEDAW. United Nations Development Fund for Women, New York (2006).
579.
Morris, L.: Rights: sociological perspectives. Routledge, New York (2006).
580.
Buss, D., Manji, A.S.: International law: modern feminist approaches. Hart, Oxford (2005).
581.
Epprecht, M.: Sexual minorities, human rights and public health strategies in Africa. African Affairs. 111, 223–243 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1093/afraf/ads019.
582.
Eide, A., Krause, C., Rosas, A.: Economic, social and cultural rights: a textbook. M. Nijhoff Publishers, Dordrecht (2001).
583.
Gerber, P., Gory, J.: The UN Human Rights Committee and LGBT Rights: What is it Doing? What Could it be Doing? Human Rights Law Review. 14, 403–439 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1093/hrlr/ngu019.
584.
Grimshaw, P., Holmes, K., Lake, M.: Women’s rights and human rights: International historical perspectives. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2001).
585.
A RIGHTS-BASED APPROACH TO REALIZING GENDER EQUALITY, http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/news/savitri.htm.
586.
Jolly, S., Cornwall, A., Hawkins, K.: Women, sexuality and the political power of pleasure. Zed Books, London (2013).
587.
Herdt, G.H., Howe, C.: 21st century sexualities: contemporary issues in health, education, and rights. Routledge, London (2007).
588.
Howe, C.: Intimate activism: the struggle for sexual rights in postrevolutionary Nicaragua. Duke University Press, Durham (2013).
589.
Hodgson, D.L.: Women’s Rights as Human Rights: Women in Law and Development in Africa (WiLDAF). Africa Today. 49, 3–26 (2002).
590.
Cook, R.J.: Human rights of women: national and international perspectives. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1994).
591.
Judd, E.R.: No Change for Thirty Years: The Renewed Question of Women’s Land Rights in Rural China. Development & Change. 38, 689–710 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7660.2007.00429.x.
592.
Kaganas, F., Murray, C.: The Contest between Culture and Gender Equality under South Africa’s Interim Constitution. Journal of Law and Society. 21, (1994). https://doi.org/10.2307/1410665.
593.
Kokhatkar, S.: The Impact of U.S. Intervention on Afghan Women’s Rights. Berkeley Women’s Law Journal. 17, 12–19 (2002).
594.
Lind, A.: Development, sexual rights and global governance. Routledge, London (2010).
595.
Alston, P., Robinson, M.: Human rights and development: towards mutual reinforcement. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005).
596.
Peters, J.S., Wolper, A. eds: Women’s rights, human rights: international feminist perspectives. Routledge, London (1995).
597.
Merry, S.E.: Human rights and gender violence: translating international law into local justice. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (2006).
598.
Mukhopadhyay, M., Singh, N.: Gender justice, citizenship and development. Zubaan, an imprint of Kali for Women, New Delhi (2007).
599.
Mullally, S.: Gender, culture and human rights: reclaiming universalism. Hart Pub, Oxford (2006).
600.
Musa, R., Mohammed, F.J., Manji, F., Solidarity for African Women’s Rights, African Union. Directorate of Women, Gender and Development: Breathing life into the African Union protocol on women’s rights in Africa. Solidarity for African Women’s Rights, Nairobi (2006).
601.
Ndashe, S.: The Duty to Protect Women from Sexual Violence in South Africa. Feminist Legal Studies. 12, 213–221 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1023/B:FEST.0000043338.43012.56.
602.
Nyamu-Musembi, C., Cornwall, A.: What is the Rights Based Approach all about? Perspectives from International Development Agencies - Institute of Development Studies, https://www.ids.ac.uk/publication/what-is-the-rights-based-approach-all-about-perspectives-from-international-development-agencies.
603.
Benedek, W., Kisaakye, E.M., Oberleitner, G.: The human rights of women: international instruments and African  experiences. Zed Books, London (2002).
604.
Peters, J.S., Wolper, A. eds: Women’s rights, human rights: international feminist perspectives. Routledge, London (1995).
605.
Cook, R.J.: Human rights of women: national and international perspectives. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1994).
606.
Razavi, S.: Agrarian change, gender and land rights. Blackwell, Oxford (2003).
607.
Reilly, N.: Women’s human rights: seeking gender justice in a globalizing age. Polity, Cambridge (2009).
608.
Tamale, S.: African Sexualities, http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/current/undergraduate/materials/la346/notes/shaikh_-_morality_justice_and_gender_-_reading_muslim_tradition_on_reproductive_choices.pdf.
609.
Cook, R.J.: Human rights of women: national and international perspectives. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (1994).
610.
Thomas, F.: Global rights, local realities: Negotiating gender equality and sexual rights in the Caprivi Region, Namibia. Culture, Health & Sexuality. 9, 599–614 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1080/13691050701526263.
611.
Tonnessen, L.: Between Sharia and CEDAW in Sudan: Islamist Women Negotiating Gender Equity, http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/law/current/undergraduate/materials/la346/notes/tonnessen_-_between_sharia_and_cedaw_in_sudan.pdf.
612.
United Nations. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific: Promoting women’s rights as human rights. United Nations, New York (1999).
613.
Anker, C. van den, Doomernik, J. eds: Trafficking and women’s rights. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2006).
614.
Walter, L.: Women’s rights: a global view. Greenwood Press, Westport, CT (2000).
615.
Wanyeki, L.M.: Women and land in Africa: culture, religion and realizing women’s right’s. Zed Books, London (2003).
616.
Welchman, L.: Women’s rights and Islamic family law: perspectives on reform. Zed Books, London (2004).
617.
Clark, D.A.: The Capability Approach: Its Development, Critiques and Recent Advances, http://www.gprg.org/pubs/workingpapers/pdfs/gprg-wps-032.pdf.
618.
Sen, A.: Poverty as capability deprivation. In: Development as freedom. pp. 87–110. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1999).
619.
Cin, F.M.: Gender justice, education and equality: creating capabilities for girls’ and women’s development. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2016).
620.
Cornwall, A., Rivas, A.-M.: From ‘gender equality and ‘women’s empowerment’ to global justice: reclaiming a transformative agenda for gender and development. Third World Quarterly. 36, 396–415 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2015.1013341.
621.
Molyneux, M., Razavi, S., United Nations Research Institute for Social Development: Gender justice, development, and rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2002).
622.
Agarwal, B., Humphries, J., Robeyns, I.: Capabilities, freedom, and equality: Amartya Sen’s work from a gender perspective. Oxford University Press, New Delhi (2007).
623.
Basu, K., Kanbur, S.M.R., Sen, A.: Arguments for a better world: essays in honor of Amartya Sen, Vol. 2: Societies, institutions, and development. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008).
624.
Basu, K., Kanbur, S.M.R., Sen, A.: Arguments for a better world: essays in honor of Amartya Sen, Vol. 2: Societies, institutions, and development. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008).
625.
Basu, K., Kanbur, S.M.R., Sen, A.: Arguments for a better world: essays in honor of Amartya Sen, Vol. 2: Societies, institutions, and development. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008).
626.
Agyar, E.: Contribution of Perceived Freedom and Leisure Satisfaction to Life Satisfaction in a Sample of Turkish Women. Social Indicators Research. 116, 1–15 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-013-0268-0.
627.
Araya, F.G., Chung, M.K.: Promoting gender equalities from a capability perspective: The role of social policy in the context of developing countries. International Review of Public Administration. 20, 136–152 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/12294659.2015.1020588.
628.
Avin, R.: Engendering Development: A Critique. In: Feminist economics and the World Bank: history, theory, and policy. pp. 65–78. Routledge, London (2006).
629.
Benería, L.: Gender, development, and globalization: economics as if all people mattered. Routledge, New York (2003).
630.
Comim, F., Nussbaum, M.C. eds: Capabilities, gender, equality: towards fundamental entitlements. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2014).
631.
DeJaeghere, J.: Public Debate and Dialogue from a Capabilities Approach: Can it Foster Gender Justice in Education? Journal of Human Development and Capabilities. 13, 353–371 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/19452829.2012.679650.
632.
Fraser, N., Honneth, A.: Redistribution or recognition?: a political-philosophical exchange. Verso, London (2003).
633.
Fraser, N.: Scales of justice: reimagining political space in a globalizing world. Columbia University Press, New York (2009).
634.
Frediani, A.A.: Sen’s Capability Approach as a framework to the practice of development.
635.
Fukuda-Parr, S.: The Human Development Paradigm: Operationalizing Sen’s Ideas on Capabilities. Feminist Economics. 9, 301–317 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/1354570022000077980.
636.
George, A.: Explicating the Capability Approach through the Voices of the Poor: A Case Study of Waste-picking Women in Kerala. Journal of Human Development and Capabilities. 16, 33–46 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1080/19452829.2014.938728.
637.
Guzman, V., Barozet, E., Candia, E., Ihnen, B., Leiva, B.: Capabilities and Gender: A Sum or System of Inequalities? The Case of Chile. CEPAL Review. 49–62 (2012).
638.
Helne, T., Hirvilammi, T.: Wellbeing and Sustainability: A Relational Approach. Sustainable Development. 23, 167–175 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.1581.
639.
Hil, M.T.: DEVELOPMENT AS EMPOWERMENT, http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.595.6844&rep=rep1&type=pdf.
640.
Kleine, D., Light, A., Montero, M.-J.: Signifiers of the life we value? – considering human development, technologies and Fair Trade from the perspective of the capabilities approach. Information Technology for Development. 18, 42–60 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1080/02681102.2011.643208.
641.
Nelson, J.: Freedom, Reason, and More: Feminist Economics and Human Development. Journal of Human Development. 5, 309–333 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/1464988042000277224.
642.
Nussbaum, M.: Women and equality: The capabilities approach. International Labour Review. 138, 227–245 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1564-913X.1999.tb00386.x.
643.
Nussbaum, M.: Capabilities as Fundamental Entitlements: Sen and Social Justice. Feminist Economics. 9, 33–59 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1080/1354570022000077926.
644.
Nussbaum, M.C.: Creating capabilities: the human development approach. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2011).
645.
Pyles, L.: The capabilities approach and violence against women. International Social Work. 51, 25–36 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1177/0020872807083912.
646.
Sen, A.: Poverty and famines: an essay on entitlement and deprivation. Clarendon, Oxford (1982).
647.
Tinker, I.: Persistent inequalities: women and world development. Oxford University Press, New York (1990).
648.
Sen, A.H.C.P.W.R.P.S.R.S.M.G.I.D.R.V.P. and C.S.J.H.L.M.: More Than 100 Million Women Are Missing. The New York Review of Books. (1990).
649.
Sen, A.: Capabilities, Lists, and Public Reason: Continuing the Conversation. Feminist Economics. 10, 77–80 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1080/1354570042000315163.
650.
Sen, A.: The idea of justice. Allen Lane, London (2009).
651.
Staveren, I. van: The feminist economics of trade. Routledge, London (2007).
652.
Thomas, M.A.M., Rugambwa, A.: Equity, Power, and Capabilities: Constructions of Gender in a Tanzanian Secondary School. Feminist Formations. 23, 153–175 (2011).
653.
Unterhalter, E., North, A.: Responding to the gender and education Millennium Development Goals in South Africa and Kenya: reflections on education rights, gender equality, capabilities and global justice. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education. 41, 495–511 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2011.581516.
654.
Walker, J., Berekashvili, N., Lomidze, N.: Valuing Time: Time Use Survey, the Capability Approach, and Gender Analysis. Journal of Human Development and Capabilities. 15, 47–59 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1080/19452829.2013.837033.
655.
Cameron, S.: Handbook on the economics of leisure. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham (2011).
656.
White, S.C.: Analysing wellbeing: a framework for development practice.
657.
Cornwall, A.: The participation reader. Zed Books, London (2011).
658.
Elson, D.: Structural Adjustment with Gender Awareness? Indian journal of gender studies. 1, 149–167 (1994).
659.
Harcourt, W.: Five Years after Beijing: a fantasy for a just and enabling global economy. Journal of SID. 4, 39–43 (1994).
660.
Reiter, R.R.: Toward an anthropology of women. Monthly Review Press, New York (1975).