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    Problematising the digital gender gap: invoking decoloniality and intersectionality for inclusive policymaking

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    Author(s)
    Dixit, Anukriti
    Banday, Muneeb Ul Lateef
    Editor(s)
    Satija, Shivani
    Publication date
    2022-12-07
    Subject
    Gender
    Keywords
    Digital gender gap
    intersectionality
    decoloniality
    empowerment
    development
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher(s)
    Oxfam KEDV
    Oxfam India
    Oxfam Colombia
    Oxfam Mexico
    Oxfam South Africa
    Routledge
    Oxfam Brazil
    Journal
    Gender & Development
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10546/621458
    DOI
    10.1080/13552074.2022.2117930
    Document type
    Journal article
    Language
    English
    Description
    <html> <head> <title></title> </head> <body> <p>The digital economy is seen as the latest phase in the socioeconomic development trajectory. There has been a proliferation of policy documents on ensuring gendered inclusion and addressing the &#8216;gender gap&#8217; in the digital economy. Particularly in the context of the &#8216;third world&#8217;, there are large volumes of &#8216;evidence&#8217; reported linking economic welfare through digital inclusion and gender equality. Drawing from capabilities, intersectionality, and decolonial scholarship, we analyse how the problem of the &#8216;gender gap&#8217; in the &#8216;digital economy&#8217; is constituted through particular discourses. We employ an approach termed &#8216;problematisation&#8217;, which contends that policies produce and articulate &#8216;problems&#8217; in specific ways rather than solve pre-ordained &#8216;problems&#8217;. We take &#8216;problem&#8217; and &#8216;solution&#8217; articulations within the most recent reports by multilateral governance bodies, including the World Bank, UN Women, and the World Economic Forum (WEF), among others. Our findings indicate that digital gender gap policies are formulated through interlinking assumptions of the capabilities approach with neoliberal rationality. Accordingly, the &#8216;gender gap&#8217; is produced as a problem of rights and economic development to be solved through neoliberal &#8216;empowerment&#8217; and &#8216;entrepreneurship&#8217;. In an attempt to produce universal cross-cultural frameworks, these policy documents ignore the intersectionality of gendered power relations and reproduce colonial frameworks of development, modernity, and progress. The latter is accomplished through the technologies of statistical scientificity (generalised causality) and temporality (&#8216;developed versus developing&#8217; discourses of modernity). We, therefore, argue that developmental policymaking, particularly the capabilities approach, must incorporate intersectionality and decoloniality to be effective, inclusive, and unsettle colonial universalisation.</p> </body> </html>
    Pages
    21
    ISSN
    1355-2074
    EISSN
    1364-9221
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1080/13552074.2022.2117930
    Scopus Count
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