Creating alternative spaces and articulating needs: Challenging gendered notions of forestry and forest ownership through women's networks
Elias Andersson and
Gun Lidestav
Forest Policy and Economics, 2016, vol. 67, issue C, 38-44
Abstract:
The forest industry continues to be men dominated, dependent on forest owners' supply of raw material and of significant importance to the national and local economy and economic development in Sweden. The interconnection between masculinity and the work, knowledge, forest owners and professionals in the sector contributes to exclusion of women. In response to this, women forest owners have formed networks in different local areas. Through focus group interviews, this study examined the strategies, functions and positions of these networks, both in their individual locations and the overall policy processes of gender mainstreaming of the sector, to scrutinise the reproduction of gender inequities and the gendered notion of forestry. The results show how the networks are acting to expand the discursive space, establish alternative publics and empower their members by inventing and circulating counterdiscourses. The different strategies adopted by the networks appear to have emerged in response to contemporary political processes. The conclusion is that one single public sphere cannot encompass the diversity of the contemporary forestry sector, indicating a need to contain a multiplicity of publics, both to challenge the modes of deliberation that mask domination and to facilitate transformative processes.
Keywords: Policy; Empowerment; Deliberation; Gender mainstreaming; Counterpublics; Sweden (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (14)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:forpol:v:67:y:2016:i:c:p:38-44
DOI: 10.1016/j.forpol.2016.03.014
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