Transforming communicative spaces: the rhythm of gender in meetings in rural solomon islands

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: Michelle Dyer from the Stockholm Resilience Centre, James Cook University have published the research: Transforming communicative spaces: the rhythm of gender in meetings in rural Solomon Islands, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
  • what: A novel method of analysis is introduced to provide a tool for other researchers and development practitioners to apply in different cultural contexts. The research reveals how forms of meeting practice may embed the disjuncture between gender parity (i.e., equal numbers of men and women) and gender equality (i.e., equal influence), by showing how some styles of meeting, which are . . .

     

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