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Interrogating harmful cultural practices, gender, culture and coercion, edited by Chia Longman, Ghent University, Belgium and Tamsin Bradley, University of Portsmouth, UK

Label
Interrogating harmful cultural practices, gender, culture and coercion, edited by Chia Longman, Ghent University, Belgium and Tamsin Bradley, University of Portsmouth, UK
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Interrogating harmful cultural practices
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
bibliography
Responsibility statement
edited by Chia Longman, Ghent University, Belgium and Tamsin Bradley, University of Portsmouth, UK
Sub title
gender, culture and coercion
Summary
This volume explores a variety of ? harmful cultural practices?T: a term increasingly employed by organizations working within a human rights framework to refer to certain discriminatory practices against women in the global South. Drawing on recent work by feminists across the social sciences, as well as activists from around the world, this volume discusses and presents research on practices such as veiling, forced marriage, honour related and dowry violence, female genital ? mutilation?T, lip plates and sex segregation in public space. With attention to the analytic utility of the notion of harmful cultural practices, this volume explores questions surrounding the contribution of feminist thought to international and NGO policies on such practices, whether western beauty practices should be analysed in similar terms, or should the notion as such from an anthropological perspective be rejected, how harmful cultural practices relate to processes of culturalization, religionization and secularization, and how they can be challenged, come to transform and disappear. Presenting concrete, empirical case studies from Africa, South East Asia, Europe and the UK Interrogating Harmful Cultural Practices will be of interest to scholars of sociology, anthropology, development and law with interests in gender, the body, violence and women?Ts agency
Classification