Building Empowerment, Resisting Patriarchy

Author:

Chaudhuri Soma1,Morash Merry2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, Michigan State University Email: chaudh30@msu.edu

2. School of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University Email: chaudh30@msu.edu, Email: morashm@msu.edu

Abstract

This research explores how empowerment programs impact gender-based violence and the social structures that lead to such violence in the first place. Drawing from interviews with former participants in empowerment programs that focus on building community leaders, the study examines how grassroots women lead interventions and their effects on leaders’ and survivors’ lives. We find that although most survivors had displayed some agency in independently resisting violence, their efforts were more effective when coupled with a support network and access to resources. With the intervention of leaders, the survivors were able to better negotiate for justice with a renewed sense of agency. For the leaders, participation in programs gave them an identity independent of their status within the family. They promoted change by developing independent, innovative intervention strategies that worked despite the tight structural constraints of gendered norms.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

Development

Reference60 articles.

1. Agarwal, Bina. 1994. A Field of One's Own: Gender and Land Rights in South Asia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

2. “Portraits of Believers: Ahmadi Women Performing Faith in the Diaspora.”;Journal of International Women's Studies,2004

3. Banu, Ayesha. 2016. “Human Development, Disparity and Vulnerability: Women in South Asia.” Background Paper, UNDP Human Development Report.

4. “Sexual Property: Staging Rape and Marriage in Indian Law and Feminist Theory.”;Feminist Studies,2011

5. “Judges of Normality: Mediating Marriage in the Family Courts of Kolkata, India.”;Signs,2012

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