Voices from Feminist Political Ecology Edited by Bernadette P

Voices from Feminist Political Ecology Edited by Bernadette P

“I am recommending this book because I don’t think there is any that delves into this subject of the daily struggles and achievements of ‘gender experts’ working in environment and development organizations. As a ‘gender expert’ myself, I think it is indeed very timely for such a collection to reveal how gender experts navi- gate through the challenges and professional cultures within development organi- sations, as ‘change agents’ to bring about the transformation they are mandated to. Fascinating and intriguing – a much needed book to understand the workings within development organisations.” Chanda Gurung Goodrich, PhD, Senior Gender Specialist – Gender Lead, International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) “Feminist movement faces new ‘second generation’ issues as it enters the third decade of the 21st century. Its three palpable seismic fault lines are: polarized North-South contexts, activists versus agency ‘femocrats’, and women profes- sionals versus gender experts. Using polyvocal dialogues with representatives in these tectonic zones rather than monochrome essays, Resurreccin and Elmhirst blend feminism's political economy, science technology studies in ecology and field activism to throw a powerful spotlight on the politicized pathways ahead. This is a book that must be read by professionals and gender experts thrown into uneasy company.” Dipak Gyawali, former Nepali minister of water resources, leading IDRC-supported research on water-induced disasters, gender and climate change “This timely book reads like an act of solidarity, as it reviews debates around the struggles, compromises, and achievements of ‘gender experts’, and acknowl- edges their persistent efforts to disregard professional, personal and disciplinary boundaries. And it feels like a call to action, by reminding us that making gender justice central to addressing existential environmental threats must overcome all boundaries.” Ines Smyth, Independent Consultant, former Senior Gender Advisor, Oxfam “At long last, a book we have been waiting for! Going past binaries of good femi- nists and co-opted femocrats, speaking to us directly through voices of ‘gender- experts’ and providing a sharp and reflective framework to think through their narratives, this is a book that speaks to all interested in bringing forth a more just and sustainable world. It highlights the work of the workers on the sustainability frontline, who everyday work across an epistemological interface, take charge and confront the vicissitudes of integrating, translating, embodying gender into envi- ronmental and development work, or in fact ‘genderising a log-frame’.” Seema Arora-Jonsson, Professor of Rural Development, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences “What happens when a marine biologist, a mechanical engineer, and a water engineer encounter gender expertise? In this exciting new book, Bernadette Resurreccin and Rebecca Elmhirst help us understand how gender experts nego- tiate the tensions that arise from a clash of very different kinds of knowledge, that is positivist science and feminism. Effectively expanding cutting-edge femi- nist literatures in political ecology and science and technology studies, they shed long overdue light on mainstreaming gender into various areas of environment and development. The book is a smart exercise in feminist reflexivity and offers a stimulating firework of ideas of what happens when gender experts work with sci- entists on issues ranging from climate change to water insecurity, and when they insert themselves in technologies ranging from geospatial imaging to modelling futures. Highly recommended!” Elisabeth Prgl, Professor of International Relations, and Director, Gender Centre, Graduate Institute, Geneva “Highlighting the politics of gender, knowledge, and expertise among practition- ers this volume addresses a key question—how do practitioners and profession- als navigate gender-related challenges in their everyday work, and what might this suggest about the broader politics of knowledge and expertise? From fields as diverse as agrobiodiversity, disaster risk, or marine biology, exploring these dynamics represents a novel and welcome addition to ongoing debates in feminist political ecology, science studies, and the politics of environment and develop- ment. Sharing these experiences also has the potential to inspire and support those working to realize a more equitable and sustainable world.” Leila M. Harris, Professor, University of British Columbia/ Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice, Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability “This book takes on the challenge of putting research into practice with curiosity and rigour. Through an exploration of the ‘gender expert’, the book shows the challenges of implementing conclusions from research. Gender and intersectional inequalities are well documented in development research, leading to the prolif- eration of ‘gender experts’ to address them. But such efforts encounter numerous obstacles at all levels of program design and implementation. By engaging the professional experiences of gender experts across a range of natural resource sec- tors, this book shows the importance of on-going dialogue between research and practice.” Andrea Nightingale, Professor, Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo “Understanding how change happens in environmental policy and practice in development organizations could scarcely be more urgent today. This book pro- vides a fascinating and critical view into the world of ‘gender experts’, those who are simultaneously charged with transforming their institutions, while also coming up with policy ‘asks’, win-wins, technical fixes, and killer facts. By reflecting on their dilemmas, strategies and compromises, this book provides the inspiration and the insights that feminists need to continue chipping away at for change ‘from within’.” Laura Turquet, Policy Advisor, UN Women and co-founder of the UN Feminist Network “This is a stunning and original work by Bernadette Resurreccin, Rebecca Elmhirst and their diverse writing collaborators, exploring the performance and organisational milieu confronting gender professionals in the pursuit of gender and environmental transformations. The gender experts’ fields of knowledge may clash with those of their professional colleagues; they themselves are often learn- ing on the job but are expected to deliver on outsized work expectations, creating cross-cutting gender platforms and also mainstreaming gender into internal silos of environment and development work. How is it working out? Read this book and learn!” Meryl Williams, Chair, Gender in Aquaculture and Fisheries Section, Asian Fisheries Society “It is with great pleasure I endorse this book. Through a series of conversations with ‘gender experts’, the two eminent scholars in the field of political ecology, Bernadette Resurreccin and Rebecca Elmhirst, have successfully taken on the innovative task to unravel their daily struggles and achievements in environment and development organisations.” Ragnhild Lund, Professor Emeritus, Department of Geography, Norwegian University of Technology (NTNU) Negotiating Gender Expertise in Environment and Development This book casts a light on the daily struggles and achievements of ‘gender experts’ working in environment and development organisations, where they are charged with advancing gender equality and social equity and aligning this with visions of sustainable development. Developed through a series of conversations convened by the book’s editors with leading practitioners from research, advocacy and donor organisations, this text explores the ways gender professionals – specialists and experts, researchers, organizational focal points – deal with personal, power-laden realities associated with navigating gender in everyday practice. In turn, wider questions of epis- temology and hierarchies of situated knowledges are examined, where gender analysis is brought into fields defined as largely techno-scientific, positivist and managerialist. Drawing on insights from feminist political ecology and feminist science, technology and society studies, the authors and their collaborators reveal and reflect upon strategies that serve to mute epistemological boundaries and enable small changes to be carved out that on occasions open up promising and alternative pathways for an equitable future. This book will be of great relevance to scholars and practitioners with an inter- est in environment and development, science and technology, and gender and women’s studies more broadly. Bernadette P. Resurreccin is Associate Professor in the Department of Global Development Studies at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, and for- merly was a Senior Research Fellow at Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI). Rebecca Elmhirst is Professor of Human Geography in the School of Environment and Technology at the University of Brighton, UK. Routledge Studies in Gender and Environments With the European Union, United Nations, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, and national governments and businesses at least ostensibly pay- ing more attention to gender, including as it relates to environments, there is more need than ever for existing and future scholars, policy makers, and environmental professionals to understand and be able to apply these concepts to work towards greater gender equality in and for a sustainable world. Comprising edited collections, monographs

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