ABSTRACT

This book is concerned with understanding the complex ways in which gender violence and poverty impact on young people’s lives, and the potential for education to challenge violence.

Although there has been a recent expansion of research on gender violence and schooling, the field of research that brings together thinking on gender violence, poverty and education is in its infancy. This book sets out to establish this new field by offering innovative research insights into the nature of violence affecting children and young people; the sources of violence, including the relationship with poverty and inequality; the effects of violence on young subjectivities; and the educational challenge of how to counter violence.

Authors address three interrelated aims in their chapters:

  • to identify theoretical and methodological framings for understanding the relationship between gender, violence, poverty and education
  • to demonstrate how young people living in varying contexts of poverty in the Global South learn about, engage in, respond to and resist gender violence
  • to investigate how institutions, including schools, families, communities, governments, international and non-governmental organisations and the media constrain or expand possibilities to challenge gender violence in the Global South.

Describing a range of innovative research projects, the chapters display what scholarly work can offer to help meet the educational challenge, and to find ways to help young people and those around them to understand, resist and rupture the many faces of violence.

Gender Violence in Poverty Contexts will appeal to an international audience of postgraduate students, academics and researchers in the fields of international and comparative education, gender and women’s studies, teacher education, poverty, development and conflict studies, African and Asian studies and related disciplines. It will also be of interest to professionals in NGOs and other organisations, and policy makers, keen to develop research-informed practice.

Winner of the 2016 Jackie Kirk Outstanding Book Award.

part I|48 pages

Theory and diagnostics

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|19 pages

Hope and history

Education engagements with poverty, inequality and gender violence

chapter 3|19 pages

Researching gender violence in schools in poverty contexts

Conceptual and methodological challenges

part II|52 pages

Experiencing violence in the home and the school

part III|49 pages

Negotiating gender violence

chapter 7|15 pages

‘You don't want to die. You want to reach your goals'

Alternative voices among young Black men in urban South Africa

chapter 9|16 pages

Sexuality, sexual norms and schooling

Choice–coercion dilemmas

part IV|56 pages

Policy and interventions

chapter 10|15 pages

From assets to actors

Reassessing the integration of girls in anti-gang initiatives in Rio de Janeiro

chapter 11|15 pages

Violent lives and peaceful schools

NGO constructions of modern childhood and the role of the state

chapter 12|14 pages

Gender violence, teenage pregnancy and gender equity policy in South Africa

Privileging the voices of women and girls through participatory visual methods

chapter 13|10 pages

Conclusion

Emerging themes for the field of gender, violence, poverty and education