4 | Back to women? Translations, re-significations, and myths of gender in policy and practice in Brazil (original) (raw)

Local Gender Policies in Brazil

The purpose of this paper is to verify whether and in which degree Brazilian's local policies are oriented toward strategic or practical gender needs. In order to achieve that I analyzed data on Brazilian local gender policies from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics' Survey of Basic Municipal Information 2009, the main findings of this analysis were: in 4,522 (81.3%) out of the 5,564 Brazilian municipalities there were not any gender unit. Only in 1,042 (18.7%) municipalities there was a gender unit. Only 3.4% of them have designed a plan and 6.8% have a budget. Around 7% of the municipalities implemented policies that address violence against women. Among these initiatives were shelters and domestic violence resource center. Policies were also implemented in education, health, or work. Some programs are developed in cooperation with the government at the national or state level, NGOs, religious institutions and worker's organizations. Among these, NGOs and religious institutions stand out. The greater the municipality's population size, the greater the likelihood of the existence of a gender unit. Gender policies were different across the Brazilian states as well. For instance, in Roraima, a state in the Northern Region, there was not any municipality with policies addressing women. It has been observed as well whether Mayors' characteristics were associated with the existence of gender policies in the municipalities.

Lei Maria da Penha and the Role of Women in Gender Related Policymaking in Brazil

Lei Maria da Penha, has been seen as a great victory against domestic violence in Brazil, more specifically, domestic violence against women. Such a victory was attained even though women's representation in the Brazilian Congress is quite low. Therefore, the critical mass literature does not explain why we saw success in the passing of this legislation. The passing of this comprehensive legislation raises a number of questions regarding the role of women in the creation of gender related legislation and in the role of other actors in this process. This paper will explore the legislative process behind the creation of the Lei Maria da Penha, paying special attention to the role of women legislators and non-governmental organizations in the creation of this law.

A commentary in "dark" times: The State of the Art of Gender, Feminist and Women's Studies in Brazil1 -Adriana Piscitelli -Center for Gender Studies

2018 at the RINGS CONFERENCE AND ANNUAL MEETING, 2018

In this chapter we provide an overview of the themes and theoretical lines that have been predominant in gender studies in Brazil, paying particular attention to recent work. Brazil is considered one of the first Latin American countries in which feminist studies were consolidated. In the 1980s, research centers dedicated to women and gender were created at universities, the theme of women was included in relevant social sciences congresses and meetings, and the number of studies, dissertations and theses with a feminist orientation increased. Academic feminist and gender studies literature continued to be produced during the following decades, but they acquired an impressive rise and effervescence in the decade of 2010. Our main argument is that the recent production around gender in Brazil is intimately linked to the flourishing of feminisms that arose as a reaction to the destabilization of rights that has recently culminated in demonstrations of hate, attacks on so called "gender ideology" and the alteration and elimination of public policies directed towards gender equality. We also affirm that these new studies have important differences from previous work. These differences are related to both recent transformations in feminist fields in Brazil, which experienced unprecedented democratization, expansion, and new forms of organization and to the present political context marked by ideas and actions related to a far-right government that is deeply conservative and religious.

Gender and Public Policies

This paper conducts an analysis of the incorporation of the gender perspective by public policies at the subnational level of government in Brazil. The article begins with a reconstitution of a gender agenda and its relations with the State reform agenda and the public policies reform agenda, since the 1980's. Using as a reference proposals that came from the women's movement and from feminist entities, the article analyzes programs from three sectors -health, violence against women and employment and income generation. The analysis focuses on the adherence of these programs to the gender agenda.

Feminist Gender Wars: the reception of the concept of gender in Brazil (1980s-1990s) and the global dynamics of production and circulation of knowledge

Feminist Gender Wars: the reception of the concept of gender in Brazil (1980s-1990s) and the global dynamics of production and circulation of knowledge, 2018

[Complete PhD thesis, in English] Nowadays, the word "gender" is easily understood and recognized in the fields of Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH). “Gender Studies” is frequently seen as a legitimate area of studies, and it is recognized for its specific objects and approach. But the process through which Gender became a largely spread and accepted concept (and, more than that, the dominant way of analyzing a specific dimension of social life) happened by the end of the 20th century. This thesis intends to contribute to a sociological approach to such phenomenon, articulating it with other social processes which interacted to produce it, in the intersection (or, rather, interstice) of the scientific and political fields. The goal is to contribute to a broader understanding of knowledge production and circulation, through the specific case of the concept of Gender, in the specific context of its reception in Brazil, during the specific time of the 1980s and 1990s. The Brazilian case forces us to look at the space of knowledge production as complex global system where power isn’t either equally, steadily or permanently distributed, once we’re dealing with a country in a non-dominant position in such system. The Bourdieusian concept of field has guided the research, for providing a non-deterministic and sufficiently complex approach while highlighting the systemic (relational and positional) aspect of the object. The core methodology used was the prosopographical approach of a group of 35 researchers identified as key agents in the reception of the concept of Gender in Brazil. The sources consisted mainly in already published books, papers and documents.