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  • 1
    ISBN: 9781529207774
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (34 p.)
    Keywords: United Nations & UN agencies
    Abstract: Available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. The Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda is rooted in international law – notably international humanitarian law, human rights and international criminal law. UNSCR 1325 specifically calls upon states to respect fully the obligations within these laws, including the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). Subsequent WPS resolutions emphasize the need for commitment to women’s human rights and implementation of human rights law, without again referencing CEDAW until Resolution 2467 in April 2019. Despite the evident association of subject matter, the first seven WPS resolutions after 1325 are surprisingly silent about trafficking in women and girls, including in armed conflict. Resolution 2467 does refer to trafficking in persons but only to ask the Security Council Counter- Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate to include in its country reports information about states’ efforts to address it. This does not comprehensively locate trafficking within the WPS agenda
    Note: English
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9789048556892
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (346 p.)
    Series Statement: Digital Studies 2
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Feminist theory ; Women employees ; Women Employment ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations ; Future of Work, Global South, Digitization, Feminism, Informal Labour
    Abstract: The future of work is at the centre of debates related to the emerging digital society. Concerns range from the inclusion, equity, and dignity of those at the far end of the value chain, who participate on and off platforms, often in the shadows, invisible to policymakers, designers, and consumers. Precarity and informality characterize this largely female workforce, across sectors ranging from artisanal work to salon services to ride hailing and construction. A feminist reimagining of the futures of work—what we term as “FemWork” —is the need of the day and should manifest in multiple and various forms, placing the worker at the core and drawing on her experiences, aspirations, and realities. This volume offers grounded insights from academic, activist, legal, development and design perspectives that can help us think through these inclusive futures and possibly create digital, social, and governance infrastructures of work that are fairer and more meaningful
    Note: Frontmatter , Table of Contents , Acknowledgements , Preface , Introduction , The Tangled Web of Women in Work: A Feminist Account , Design , 1. AI Design of Ride-hailing Platforms : A Feminist Analysis of Workers’ Precarity , 2. Making Opportunities Inclusive for First-time Digital Users , 3. Globalized Creative Economies : Rethinking Local Craft, Provenance, and Platform Design , 4. Leveraging Platforms to Bridge the Gender Divide and Drive Inclusive Growth: Perspectives and Recommendations from India , 5. Women Resellers in India’s Gig Economy: From Access to Confidence , 6. Whisper Networks and Workarounds : Negotiating Urban Company’s Interface , Governance , 7. Entrepreneurs Craft the Future of Collective Artisanal Economies in Bangladesh , 8. Enabling Women’s Digital Participation : The Case for Meaningful Connectivity , 9. Not Quite the Death of Distance in Chennai : Challenging the Resettlement Utopia of Perumbakkam , 10. Superbrands—Too Big to be Fair? , 11. Teachers in India and EdTech: A New Part of the Gig Economy? , 12. Migrant Workers and Digital Inclusion in the Construction Sector in India , Networks , 13. What Lies in the Shadows of a Stakeholder Analysis? A Methodological Analysis to Contextualize the Lives of Women Workers in the Global South , 14. Why Stories Matter for Representation, Action, and Collectivization , 15. Ethical Consumerism: Gig Economy’s Road Ahead , 16. Converging Forces : Navigating Climate Change and the Future of Work in Developing Countries , 17. Challenging Capitalist Patriarchy and Negotiating for Women Worker Rights: Exploring the “Right to Sit” Movement in Kerala , 18. Digital Leisure and Aspirational Work among Venezuelan Refugee and Migrant Women in Brazil , Vision , 19. Beyond Underpaid Women and Robots : Towards a Better Future of Care Work , 20. Work and Place: The Non-Boundaries of Women’s Work , 21. The Future of Dishonourable Work , 22. The Future of Development Innovation and Finance is Feminist , 23. Rethinking a Crippled Society , Conclusion: Defining FemWork for Labour Futures , List of Tables, Graphs, and Figures , Bibliography , Index , In English
    URL: Cover  (lizenzpflichtig)
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