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Gender, identity and violence : female deselection in India / Rainuka Dagar.

By: Publication details: London ; New York ; New Delhi : Routledge, 2018.Description: xxii, 324 pages : map ; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9781138349445
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 364.152308320954 D132G
Contents:
Mapping child deselection through a civilisational periscope -- Debates on gender violence, identity and rights: Implications for female deselection -- Girl child deselection: Disappearance and invisibility in the context of Punjab -- Justifying narratives, legitimising mechanisms -- Interpreting gender and cultural specificities: Decoding the power of masculine constructs in panchayats, Punjab -- Gender positioning within the cultural support structures -- Policy and practice: Negotiating the politics of gender in identity-based exchange -- Constructing gender capital for gender justice.
Summary: The missing girls in India are not a new phenomenon. The British passed an Act to check female infanticide more than 100 years ago. Since 1960, India's birth sex ratios have progressively declined from 994 to 910, implicating life-affecting gender violence. Backed by extensive field research, data and interviews, this book explores girl child deselection through cultural neglect, female infanticide and foeticide, and the role of caste and religion. The book spans critical socio-historical contexts and examines the practice of selective right to life. It views the effects of militancy and khaap panchayats, and studies women's rights discourses and protective legal reforms. The gender imbalance is mapped globally and analysed in the specific conditions of the Indian states of Punjab and Haryana. The book examines the inter-linkages of gender hierarchies with male child preference and warns that theoretical analyses limited to female foeticide alone cannot address gender inequalities or change the cycle of violence. This will be valuable to scholars and researchers of gender and women studies, sociology, politics, and population and demographic studies. It will also be indispensable for women's rights activists, NGOs, policy makers, government bodies, and those studying health and family planning. -- Provided by publisher.
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Books Library and Documentation Division PGRRL 364.152308320954 D132G (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 113202

Mapping child deselection through a civilisational periscope --
Debates on gender violence, identity and rights: Implications for female deselection --
Girl child deselection: Disappearance and invisibility in the context of Punjab --
Justifying narratives, legitimising mechanisms --
Interpreting gender and cultural specificities: Decoding the power of masculine constructs in panchayats, Punjab --
Gender positioning within the cultural support structures --
Policy and practice: Negotiating the politics of gender in identity-based exchange --
Constructing gender capital for gender justice.


The missing girls in India are not a new phenomenon. The British passed an Act to check female infanticide more than 100 years ago. Since 1960, India's birth sex ratios have progressively declined from 994 to 910, implicating life-affecting gender violence. Backed by extensive field research, data and interviews, this book explores girl child deselection through cultural neglect, female infanticide and foeticide, and the role of caste and religion. The book spans critical socio-historical contexts and examines the practice of selective right to life. It views the effects of militancy and khaap panchayats, and studies women's rights discourses and protective legal reforms. The gender imbalance is mapped globally and analysed in the specific conditions of the Indian states of Punjab and Haryana. The book examines the inter-linkages of gender hierarchies with male child preference and warns that theoretical analyses limited to female foeticide alone cannot address gender inequalities or change the cycle of violence. This will be valuable to scholars and researchers of gender and women studies, sociology, politics, and population and demographic studies. It will also be indispensable for women's rights activists, NGOs, policy makers, government bodies, and those studying health and family planning. -- Provided by publisher.

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