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Palgrave Macmillan

Gender equality in Conditional Cash Transfer designs:

A disappearing policy recipe in Latin America and the World Bank?

  • Book
  • Sep 2024

Overview

  • Looks at how gender has been integrated into social policy in Latin America
  • Focuses in particular on the gender implications of Conditional Cash Transfers across Latin America
  • Scrutinizes the influence of the World Bank on social policy choices compared to the national political configurations

Part of the book series: Studies of the Americas (STAM)

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Keywords

  • Gender
  • Conditional Cash Transfers
  • Latin America
  • Feminism and historical institutionalism
  • Policy transfer
  • World Bank

About this book

Few aspects of social policy have been more controversial than the effects of Conditional Cash Transfers (CCTs) on gender relations and policy outcomes on gender relations are linked to policy designs. Development and social policy communities have recognized gender equality as a cornerstone of development and social progress. Nonetheless, designing policy to integrate gender equality goals into social policies is rendered that much more complicated as and when these policies travel. In Mexico in 1997, the first CCT, Progresa, looked quite different than CCTs look today. Embedded in the design was Affirmative Action geared toward girls, as was a clearly enunciated concern about the program's effects on female empowerment. For the 2005 Peruvian CCT, Juntos, the story was very different. Its design did not include any gender equality goals and it reproduced long-standing social policy legacies of gendered exclusions. Therefore, this book is about the alteration of Conditional Cash Transfer designs in relation to gender equality goals as they have made their way through Latin America as well as through the World Bank. This book aims to account for “the fading goal of gender equality” (Jenson 2015) across time as part of this regional trajectory. In short, it tracks the how and the why of this trajectory in relation to gender equality goals.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Montreal, Canada

    Nora Nagels

About the author

Nora Nagels is an associate professor of political science at the UniversitĂ© de QuĂ©bec Ă  MontrĂ©al (UQAM). She earned her PhD in Development Studies from the Graduate Institute, Geneva in 2013. She pursued postdoctoral training at the Research Chair in Citizenship and Governance in the Political Science department at the UniversitĂ© de MontrĂ©al. She co-founded l’Équipe de recherche sur l’inclusion et la gouvernance en AmĂ©rique latine (ERIGAL). Her research focuses on gender, the World Bank, citizenship and social policies in Latin America. She has recently published on comparative politics, conditional cash transfers, development, citizenship and gender in leading journals such as the International Feminist Journal of Politics; Social Politics; Social Policy & Administration, Social Policy & Society, Politica and Sociedad and Revue internationale de politique comparĂ©e.

Bibliographic Information

  • Book Title: Gender equality in Conditional Cash Transfer designs:

  • Book Subtitle: A disappearing policy recipe in Latin America and the World Bank?

  • Authors: Nora Nagels

  • Series Title: Studies of the Americas

  • Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham

  • eBook Packages: Political Science and International Studies, Political Science and International Studies (R0)

  • Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2024

  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-031-60870-4Due: 11 October 2024

  • Softcover ISBN: 978-3-031-60873-5Due: 11 October 2024

  • eBook ISBN: 978-3-031-60871-1Due: 11 October 2024

  • Edition Number: 1

  • Number of Pages: X, 190

  • Number of Illustrations: 10 b/w illustrations

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