Postcards from the Pandemic: Women, Intersectionality, and Gendered Risks in the Global COVID-19 Pandemic

IF 3.1 1区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS International Studies Review Pub Date : 2024-10-24 DOI:10.1093/isr/viae041.1
Luna K C, Megan MacKenzie
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Abstract

The COVID-19 crisis created, and continues to produce, unprecedented challenges globally. Marginalized and racialized families, communities, and nations are experiencing their worst impacts, and in particular, women and girls are the hardest hit. The most pressing concerns raised by COVID-19 include a surge in gender-based violence, a rise in care burden, the feminization of poverty, and growing unemployment, largely in the Global South and conflict-affected regions. Drawing on feminist security studies and intersectionality literature, this forum explores gendered risks in the COVID-19 era, focusing on the security of women and girls from racialized and marginalized backgrounds in both the Global North and South. This forum presents seven short papers providing rich data on a range of case studies that include Yemen, Sri Lanka, Liberia, Canada, India, and Burundi. The contributions draw attention to the multilayered, diverse, intersectional, complex, and contextual gendered risks associated with the pandemic. The through line themes of intersectional identities, patriarchy, conflict, post-conflict, militarization, and marginalization are used to illustrate how gendered risks are (re)constructed during and after the COVID-19 crisis. This forum launched what we hope will offer a new research agenda and support to provide scholarly terrain for future research. This forum section not only provides insights into the vast and complex gendered impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic but also sparks broader thinking about everyday forms of insecurity that women and girls face in global crises.
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来自大流行的明信片:全球 COVID-19 大流行中的妇女、交叉性和性别风险
COVID-19 危机在全球范围内造成并将继续造成前所未有的挑战。边缘化和种族化的家庭、社区和国家正在经受最严重的影响,尤其是妇女和女童受到的冲击最大。COVID-19 提出的最紧迫的问题包括性别暴力激增、护理负担加重、贫困女性化以及失业率上升,这些问题主要发生在全球南部和受冲突影响的地区。本论坛借鉴女权主义安全研究和交叉性文献,探讨 COVID-19 时代的性别风险,重点关注全球北方和南方的种族化和边缘化背景的妇女和女童的安全问题。本论坛发表了七篇短文,就也门、斯里兰卡、利比里亚、加拿大、印度和布隆迪等国的一系列案例研究提供了丰富的数据。这些论文提请人们注意与大流行病相关的多层次、多样化、交叉性、复杂性和背景性的性别风险。交叉身份、父权制、冲突、冲突后、军事化和边缘化等贯穿始终的主题被用来说明 COVID-19 危机期间和之后如何(重新)构建性别风险。本次论坛启动了我们希望提供新的研究议程和支持,为未来研究提供学术平台。本论坛部分不仅深入探讨了 COVID-19 大流行所带来的巨大而复杂的性别影响,还引发了对全球危机中妇女和女童所面临的日常不安全形式的更广泛思考。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: The International Studies Review (ISR) provides a window on current trends and research in international studies worldwide. Published four times a year, ISR is intended to help: (a) scholars engage in the kind of dialogue and debate that will shape the field of international studies in the future, (b) graduate and undergraduate students understand major issues in international studies and identify promising opportunities for research, and (c) educators keep up with new ideas and research. To achieve these objectives, ISR includes analytical essays, reviews of new books, and a forum in each issue. Essays integrate scholarship, clarify debates, provide new perspectives on research, identify new directions for the field, and present insights into scholarship in various parts of the world.
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