Gender & the Global Slum

Anupama Rao Publishes New York Times Opinion Piece on Indian Supreme Court Ruling

Anupama Rao, Associate Professor of History, Barnard College, and director of the recently completed CSSD project on Gender and the Global Slum, published an opinion piece in the New York Times on an Indian Supreme Court ruling that bans political appeals to identity.

"In India today, we are seeing the overturning of an order predicated on the protection of social minorities in favor of majority rights," wrote Rao. "Given current politics, will Hindu majoritarian claims be allowed, while minorities are banned from making claims to discriminated identity, or social suffering?" she wrote.

Read the full piece here.

"Concept Histories of the Urban" Workshop Concludes Gender and the Global Slum Project

“Concept Histories of the Urban” was the final meeting of the CSSD working group Gender and the Global Slum. The two-day workshop on September 16-17, 2016 was organized by by Anupama Rao and Casey Primel, and supported by CSSD, the Center for the Study of Science and Society, Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, and the Heyman Center for the Humanities.

Described by Rao as an experiment in interdisciplinary and inter-regional comparisons and connections, the workshop focused on relating work on urbanizing processes outside of the West with the historical experience of the United States, and the relationship between race, space and social segregation in particular. As participant Andrew Herscher suggested, “The urban is producing concept histories,” thus prompting a rethinking of what constitutes the urban and what is distinctive about the urban.

In the first session “Violence and Visibility”, participants discussed papers by Ana Paulina Lee, Assistant Professor in the Department of Latin American and Iberian Cultures, Columbia University, and Mabel Wilson, Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University. Lee’s paper on the spatial (re)configurations of race during Mardi Gras parades in New Orleans and Wilson’s contribution about the political potential of tent cities allowed for discussions of how political claims can be made in various urban contexts.

Participants then discussed papers by Nasser Abourahme, Doctoral Candidate in the Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies Department, Columbia University, and by Anooradha Siddiqi, Assistant Professor and Faculty Fellow at the Gallatin School, New York University. Both papers dealt with camps; Abourahme explored the genealogy and political technology of the camp, and Siddiqi questioned why a complex in the periphery of Kenya has remained invisible despite substantial physical presence. The camp, with all its connotations of precarity, also raises issues of permanence, settlement, and home.

Anupama Rao and Nicholas Dagen Bloom, Associate Professor of Social Science and Chair of Interdisciplinary Studies and Urban Administration at New York Institute of Technology, elaborated the theme of home. Bloom’s contribution outlined the power and weaknesses of the term “affordable housing” in the context of New York City, and Rao explored the connections between Chicago and Bombay through the concepts of home and  and "unhousing" in both cities.

Participants continued discussing the theme of unhousing with papers by Debjani Bhattacharyya, Assistant Professor of History at Drexel University, and by Andrew Herscher, Associate Professor of Architecture, History of Art, and Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Michigan. Their contributions on the regulation of speculation in colonial Calcutta and on blight in Detroit, respectively, prompted discussion about discourses of housing rights and the relationships between speculation, blight, and enterprise.

The next session focused on “Valuation and Financialization.” Adrienne Brown, Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Chicago, wrote about appraisal as a process of subjectivity becoming scientific and intersecting with race in the context of the property market. Casey Primel, Volkswagen Postdoctoral Fellow at the Weatherhead Initiative on Global History, Harvard University, and Aarti Sethi, Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Anthropology, Columbia University, both explored the relationship between the rural and the urban. Primel elucidated how land became an object of financial calculation in Egypt and Sethi explored the concept of primitive accumulation in the context of new kinds of agriculture in India.

The second day of the workshop began with a discussion of a paper by Anthony Acciavatti, Fellow in the Agrarian Studies Program at Yale University, and a published article by Jonathan Bach, Associate Professor and Chair, Global Studies Program, at The New School. Acciavatti discussed the tubewell as a substitute for the state in the Ganges Basin in India and Bach’s article showed the significance of infrastructure as a political tool in China. These papers led to broader discussions about the relationship between infrastructure and the urban, and the politics and social life that surround infrastructure.

Carlos Forment, Associate Professor of Sociology at The New School, raised the issue of citizenship more explicitly with his paper about the notion of "plebeian citizenship" among scavengers in Buenos Aires. The theme of labor continued with a presentation by Rachel Sturman, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies at Bowdoin College, about the concept of "skill" as relating to skilled and unskilled labor in Mumbai. Laura Diamond Dixit, Doctoral Candidate in Architectural History and Theory at Columbia University, elucidated the importance of climate to the laborer as she vividly described the violence of heat on construction labor in the Persian Gulf.

During the final session, Laura Kurgan, Associate Professor of Architecture at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation and Director of the Center for Spatial Research, Columbia University, and Dare Brawley, Program Administrator at the Center for Spatial Research, Columbia University, presented their mapping of destruction in Aleppo as part of the “Conflict Urbanism: Aleppo” project at the Center for Spatial Research. This presentation sparked a lively discussion about the potential uses of these maps, the politics behind mapping, and how to make the methodological issues of mapping more transparent to users.

The workshop showcased how connecting projects across time and space can help illuminate shared concepts and forms of urbanism. The recent “spatial turn” in scholarship has demonstrated the importance and value of space to thinking about key issues in the humanities and social sciences, and this workshop highlighted how much remains to be elaborated about what makes something urban and the impacts of the urban on political and social life.

Contributed by Laura Yan

"Difference of Caste" Workshop Convenes in New Delhi

The working group Gender and the Global Slum convened a closed workshop December 21-22, 2015 at the India International Centre in New Delhi on "The Difference of Caste."

The workshop served as preparation for the forthcoming publication of a volume of the same title concerning the intersections of caste, gender, sex, and social difference, to be edited by Anupama Rao and published by Women Unlimited.

The Difference of Caste will extend and elaborate on issues that were first addressed in a reader entitled Gender and Caste: Issues in Indian Feminism, that was published by Zed in 2003. Gender and Caste asked scholars to recognize caste’s centrality to the production of the gendered subject, and feminism’s complicity in producing a limited, or partial subject of feminism.

The workshop was supported by funds from the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, and the Center for the Study of Social Difference. Read more about the workshop here.

Women Leaders in Changing India

Anupama Rao, Women Creating Change project director for "Gender and the Global Slum" will participate in a discussion at the Four Seasons Hotel in Mumbai, featuring: Anjali Bansal ’97SIPA, Managing Director, Spencer Stuart, Sheela Patel, Director, Society for the Promotion of Area Resource Centers (SPARC), and Falguni Nayar P: ’12CC, Founder and CEO Nykaa.com.  The panel will address the challenges and opportunities that face women in India's formal and informal economies.

The panel will be moderated by Vishakha Desai, Special Advisor for Global Affairs Columbia University, Professor of Professional Practice in the Faculty of International and Public Affairs.  

Read more here.

Female Leadership, Labor, and Women's Lives in India

Anupama Rao, Project Director of the Women Creating Change working group "Gender & the Global Slum" reflects on female leadership, labor, and women's lives in India.

There are a number of contradictions that organize women’s lives in India today. The conditions and consequences of women’s work is a central one among them.

Female labor is not rare, neither is it new: women are overwhelmingly responsible for all manner of ‘care work’; they are employed in low-productivity agriculture and small-scale manufacturing; and they are present in large numbers in call centers. Women also occupy prominent decision-making roles in politics, and in the private sector. That is to say, neither women, nor the work that women do is invisible.

So far as education is concerned, new studies confirm that there exists no “gender gap” between the performance of boys and girls including in fields such as math and science until the onset of puberty. But it does not stop there. Studies also suggest that young women are significantly outperforming their male counterparts in high school and college, so much so that the underperformance of boys and young men—and its impact on gender relations more broadly—is now a topic of concern.

Yet a recent study found that female participation in the Indian economy, i.e., paid work outside the home, is among the lowest in the emerging markets and declining. Only about six percent of women are employed in the formal sector with access to social benefits, such as pensions or maternity. In the informal sector which employs the majority of Indians, whether men or women, women’s wages are half that of men’s. OECD calculations show that growth could be boosted up to 2.4% points with a package of pro-growth and pro-women policies.

Though enormous, the challenges women leaders face must be viewed against this backdrop of the under-valuing of female labor more generally, combined with the discrimination faced by women in all sectors of the economy with respect to equal pay and benefits.

Challenges to female leadership:

Below I outline a number of challenges specific to female leadership as a set of possible talking points for discussion. As will be obvious, they span the structural hurdles women face, as well as cultures of the workplace and workplace etiquette, issues which falls into the grey area of behavior, stereotype, and expectation:

a) Female leadership as a model of fire fighting, with women brought in to manage situations of crisis. For example: Lynn Laverty Elsenhans took the helm of Sunoco after shares had fallen by 52%; Marissa Mayer was hired to save a struggling Yahoo; and Mary Barra was appointed to the top seat at GM just weeks before its ignition-switch investigation

b) This is connected to this is the assumption that female leadership is “nurturing,” and helps to humanize companies and corporations. (Of course the other side of this logic is that women lack the competitive spirit to run companies with a firm hand, with an eye towards profits.)

c) Since women in positions of leadership are still rare, they often become tokens, isolated from other women due to the demands made on them for appropriate behavior.

d) Women find themselves excluded from spaces where networking occurs whether sports, late night dinners, or other kinds of “old boy networks” that are inimical to the presence of women. Juggling home and family, or the fact that women may not be interested in sports and other forms of socializing means that they may be missing from key social contexts that extend beyond the workplace, but function as an extension of the boardroom.

e) Women leaders are often subject to gender stereotyping. They are viewed (by both men and women) as aggressive, or they are subject to extra scrutiny because they are seen to be emotional, irrational, or less competent than men.

f) Women often lack strong role models and lack mentors who can illuminate work culture and expectations that are usually implicit, rather than explicit

g) Company culture does not support work/life flexibility that can be essential to women, and rarely are women provided the social benefits they require to balance expectations at home and at work. If women do make the decision to take a break in their career, or to consider flexible work options, their loyalty and commitment is questioned.

What do we need?

1) A model of nurturing female leadership from within, with gender-positive models that encourage women to support each other’s careers, and to challenge the tokenism that pervades the rhetoric of gender inclusion.

2) Developing women’s sense of worth and confidence in their judgment is a necessary corollary to their ability to model positive behavior for younger women.

3) Stronger workplace regulation, prevention from harassment, and the institution of structures of accountability and transparency would go a long way in enabling a level playing field in the workplace for women and minorities.

4) Women in the public, formal sector should recognize the unequal labor conditions, and the situations of risk and precarity under which most women (and many men) work. The recognition of connections between broad inequities, on the one hand, and gender discrimination within the workplace on the other, is essential for creating a strong sense of corporate responsibility on the part of women leaders who are in a position to draw on their own experience to push for social benefits for others.

 

Anupama Rao is Associate Professor of History at Barnard College; a member of the Executive Committee for Women Creating Change and Senior Editor for the journal Comparative Studies in South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.