The proliferation of international gender based documents,
a plethora of gender indicators and the eagerness of
states, particularly in the Third World, to ratify these
documents as an avenue toward increasing their credibility
on the global playing field, make it difficult for issues
of women’s empowerment, rights and gender equality
to be sidelined from the discursive landscapes of national
policy discussions. Yet, how do we account for the fact
that twenty-eight years after the First International
Year of Women in 1975, women in reality, appear to be
under the same and, in many instances greater threat
within the planning machinery of these territories?
This paper examines the ways in which Trinidadian policy
makers and state managers reinforce historical and cultural
inequities of gender relations under the rhetorical
guise of increasing gender sensitivity and gender awareness.
I use the Trinidadian Gender Affairs Division as an
entry point to examine the extent to which mainstreaming
models all too easily facilitate the contradictory gesture
of arguing women’s centrality as a form of hetero-patriarchal
resistance within national machinery.
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