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In 2018, 22 teachers and four government officers started a six-month development process, designed to integrate a gender-equity lens into sex education in Eastern Province, Zambia. The initiative was funded by the Dutch Government. In this article, I explore the emancipatory potential and limits of this gender transformative approach. Civil society privileges the empowerment of women's and girls' voices through participatory methods. This situated women-led 'encounter of change' between men and women addressed the 'harmful practices' of Chewa initiation, transcending patriarchal opposition in the process. Using an applied anthropological lens, I explore what enabled this contingent change in narrative among teachers, but I also question the coloniality inherent in efforts to transform the gender and sexuality of others through the ubiquity of voice.
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Jeroen Lorist (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e70d86b6db643587686964 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00187259.2024.2326490
Jeroen Lorist
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Human Organization
University of Amsterdam
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