Handbook home
Gender, Globalisation and Development (GEND90006)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5Dual-Delivery (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | February - Dual-Delivery |
---|---|
Fees | Look up fees |
This subject examines the relationships between gender, globalisation and development, illustrated principally through case studies, policy documents, and ethnographic texts. It also draws theoretical perspectives and insights from a number of social science and humanities disciplines as well. On completion of the subject students should have an understanding of problems of writing about gender and difference: debates on modernity, globalisation, and development: gender, colonialism and postcolonialism; gender, politics, and the state; masculinities, femininities and sexualities; gender and labour; gender and development agencies; gender, religion and development; gender, sexuality, rights and transnational migration.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who successfully complete this subject should have an understanding of:
- The concepts of gender and globalisation, as well as class, ethnicity, cultural diversity, feminism, colonialism, postcolonialism, modernity and neoliberalism
- The gendered nature of the macrostructural processes of globalisation.
Generic skills
- Be able to show an advanced understanding of the changing knowledge base in the specialist area
- Be able to evaluate and synthesise the research and professional literature in the discipline
- Have an appreciation of the design, conduct and reporting of original research.
Last updated: 27 August 2024