gender | publics | panics in the global South | May 5-6, 2016


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Wilder House, 5811 S Kenwood Ave

Conference website

In the past two decades, changing economies and new, international forms of governance, not least the “women’s human rights” industry, have transformed social landscapes across the global South. In many parts of the world, these changes have provided women with economic opportunities and made images and iconography of women – and women themselves – increasingly visible in public spheres, political arenas, and professional domains. Paradoxically, however, women’s economic success and political recognition, as well as the circulation of women’s human rights discourses intended to foster equality have been accompanied by “moral panics” – both global and local – over the visibility, mobility, and sexuality of women and girls. For example in South Africa where marriage rates have reached new lows, single mothers have become a highly visible social category, eligible for state relief through a newly-instated Child Support Grant.  Their access to these new state privileges has been accompanied by increased surveillance; South African men and elders accuse young mothers of abusing their rights, upending the moral order. Both Uganda and Kenya, where national constitutions guarantee gender quotas for elected politicians, have also recently passed national legislation that seeks to regulate women’s clothing (i.e. the so-called “Miniskirt Bill” passed in Uganda in 2014). According to media reports, this legislation was initially enforced by groups of vigilantes. Meanwhile in Guatemala, as a number of organizations to protect and promote the rights of women have emerged in the aftermath of the war, making it seem as if indigenous women are now more institutionally empowered than ever, rates of domestic violence have increased throughout the country. And in India, where women have been particularly quick to take advantage of the new openings in the liberalizing economy, they have also been targets of gendered violence such as rape and sexual assault, often justified in starkly moralizing and patriarchal terms.

These observations suggest some broadly similar patterns across a range of contexts. Apparently similar phenomena, however, may reveal different social, cultural, and political processes. Given these observations, we invite papers exploring new formations of, or contests over, gendered and generational power emerging in the global South. In what ways do conflicts over women’s visibility and mobility correspond to the reconfiguration of (in)equalities between men and women? What role does the circulation of women’s human rights discourses play in this process? How do these conflicts relate to ongoing changes in kin relations, regimes of love, and new forms of state regulation? And how does attending to new social panics reveal the shifting lines of contemporary citizenship and the way in which gender figures in these arrangements?  Posting these questions, we seek to examine the ways women and men, in their everyday lives, negotiate both new forms of access to public spheres – be they economic, political, professional, or the arts – and the moral panics that access incites.

This conference is being organized by Erin Moore, Sneha Annavarapu, and Camille Roussel, with support from the Center from the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture and many other sponsors.