2010
DOI: 10.1017/s0260210509990490
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Building back better? – negotiating normative boundaries of gender mainstreaming and post-tsunami reconstruction in Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam, Indonesia

Abstract: This article focuses on gender mainstreaming policies and advocacy on gender equality in the post-tsunami context in Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam. Through the analysis, this article illustrates how gender mainstreaming policy documents and gender advocacy of the provincial and central government, when drawing from sex/gender division and binary of genders, reproduce heteronormative boundaries. By focusing on details, I argue that the image of the heteronormative nuclear family participates in normalising other ide… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
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“…LGBT subjects. For example, Queer IR has revealed security problems faced by LGBT people that are rendered invisible even in feminist analyses of human security , sexual and gender-based violence , and post-conflict reconstruction (Jauhola, 2010(Jauhola, , 2013McEvoy, 2015). Both feminist and non-feminist analyses of International…”
Section: Gender Peace and Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LGBT subjects. For example, Queer IR has revealed security problems faced by LGBT people that are rendered invisible even in feminist analyses of human security , sexual and gender-based violence , and post-conflict reconstruction (Jauhola, 2010(Jauhola, , 2013McEvoy, 2015). Both feminist and non-feminist analyses of International…”
Section: Gender Peace and Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The link between gender as diagnosis calling for gender mainstreaming and the eventual emphasis on women as outcome reflects an understanding of gender in two kinds of binary oppositions, both in their own way problematic. One is the rather rigid division between sex and gender, the other being gender as translated into two opposing sexes, men and women (Delphy, ; Jauhola, ; Zalewski, ). Gender has been institutionalised and normalised within different domains of society, such as popular culture and also in governance.…”
Section: Reconsidering These Critiques and Notions Of Changementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both the Helsinki agreement and the LoGA intended to balance the centre‐periphery grievances between the main stakeholders in this conflict, the Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (GAM or Free Aceh Movement) and the central government of Indonesia (Drexler, ; Aspinall, ). In parallel with these internal negotiations, Aceh experienced a massive foreign involvement and humanitarian aid following the tsunami, bringing further dramatic cultural and economic changes to local people not only in Aceh (Hyndman, ; Jauhola, ; Waizenegger & Hyndman, ; Zeccola, ; Hyndman, ; Phelps et al, ; Jordan & Stange, ), but also in the neighbouring countries (Nah & Bunnell, ) and among the Acehnese diaspora (Missbach, ).…”
Section: The Particular Field Of Power In Aceh Indonesiamentioning
confidence: 99%