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Professor Gale Summerfield Discusses Issues Relating to Women in Developing Nations |
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Gale Summerfield is director of the Women and Gender in Global Perspectives Program at Illinois, and is associate professor in Human and Community Development. Her research focuses on gender, development and globalization issues including strategies to improve conditions during economic and financial crises. She has written on gender aspects of reforms in China and other developing countries, risk and international economic crises, transnational migration for care work, and human security. Women were the focus of attention on numerous stops in an August swing through Africa by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and she has talked about putting women’s issues at the core of American foreign policy, especially in developing countries. Here Summerfield discusses these issues with News Bureau social sciences editor Craig Chamberlain. |
Foreign policy concerns often focus on issues of political stability or national security, and “women’s issues” and other “soft” issues traditionally get little attention. So what’s the rationale for this attention?Human security is the backbone of a society. By meeting basic needs for women as well as men, such as employment, health care, housing and education, for example, a society is less likely to have the instability that generates extremists. And as Hillary Clinton said in a recent interview, women who feel safe in their societies also are likely to have smaller, better-educated families, which can minimize stress on the environment and reduce conflicts over land and water.
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