Rakesh Thakur and Mannat Brar
This analysis examines gender mainstreaming in developing economies through sociological and economic lenses, exploring how integrating gender perspectives into economic policy and practice affects both social relations and economic outcomes. Gender mainstreaming emerged from recognition that isolated "women's projects" inadequately addressed structural inequalities, requiring instead comprehensive integration of gender considerations across all development domains. The historical context reveals how colonial legacies, postcolonial nation-building, and globalization processes shaped distinctive gender arrangements across different regions, necessitating contextually grounded approaches rather than universal prescriptions. Theoretical frameworks drawing from feminist scholarship, development economics, and sociological perspectives illuminate how gender operates as a fundamental organizing principle of economic systems rather than a peripheral concern. Economic impact analysis demonstrates that gender inequality imposes substantial costs on developing economies through reduced human capital utilization, persistent labour market inefficiencies, and undervaluation of non-market production. Simultaneously, gender-responsive approaches yield measurable benefits including enhanced household welfare, improved agricultural productivity, and more sustainable natural resource management. Sociologically, gender mainstreaming initiatives catalyze complex transformations in family structures, intergenerational relationships, and community dynamics, though cultural norms demonstrate significant resilience amid material changes. The rural-urban divide figures prominently in these transformations, with urban contexts typically demonstrating faster normative evolution while rural areas maintain more traditional arrangements. Effective policy approaches integrate gender analysis into all economic planning processes, address legal and regulatory barriers, develop gender-responsive infrastructure, promote women's financial inclusion, transform education systems, invest in care infrastructure, and establish robust accountability mechanisms. These strategies must balance top-down policy frameworks with bottom-up engagement of local women's organizations. Gender mainstreaming ultimately involves not merely technical interventions but fundamental renegotiations of power relations, requiring continuous learning and adaptation rather than rigid implementation blueprints. By approaching gender equality as both an intrinsic good and instrumental to broader development objectives, developing economies can establish more equitable, sustainable, and resilient economic systems.
Pages: 90-95 | 545 Views 126 Downloads