Gender, ‘race’, poverty, health and discourses of health reform in the context of globalization: a postcolonial feminist perspective in policy research

Nursing Inquiry 7 (4):220-229 (2000)
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Abstract

Gender, ‘race’, poverty, health and discourses of health reform in the context of globalization: a postcolonial feminist perspective in policy researchIn this paper, I draw on extant literature and my empirical work to discuss the impact of globalization and healthcare reform on the lives of women — those from countries of the South as well as of the North. First, I review briefly the economic hardships identified in different sectors of the population that have been attributed to how globalization is now working. Second, I examine what these global processes mean for health, with particular focus on poverty, gender, racialization and health. Third, I reflect on how nurse scientists might develop research agendas in the 21st century that would foster social transformation and social justice for all people. The position taken here is not an indictment of globalization. Rather, I argue that globalization is a fact in all of our lives. There are positive aspects of globalization. There are also negative aspects which we must collectively address, given that the issues identified can have deleterious consequences for the world’s poor, women in particular. I suggest that, to construct knowledge for practice and praxis, research agendas of the future should be inclusive of subaltern voices. I argue that drawing on a postcolonial feminist epistemology might help us to define such agendas, and express the multilayered sociopolitical contexts of health and illness in advocacy with policy‐makers.

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References found in this work

No longer patient: feminist ethics and health care.Susan Sherwin - 1992 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Health, social class and African-American women.Evelyn L. Barbee & Marilyn Little - 1993 - In Stanlie Myrise James & Abena P. A. Busia (eds.), Theorizing black feminisms: the visionary pragmatism of Black women. New York: Routledge. pp. 182--99.
Krishnamurti to himself: his last journal.Jiddu Krishnamurti - 1993 - [San Francisco]: HarperSanFrancisco.

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