Bibtex export

 

@article{ Lotter2017,
 title = {Gender Gap, Gender Trap: Negotiations of Intersectionality and Patriarchy amongst Women Elites in Nepal},
 author = {Lotter, Stefanie},
 journal = {International Quarterly for Asian Studies (IQAS)},
 number = {1-2},
 pages = {97-115},
 volume = {48},
 year = {2017},
 issn = {2566-6878},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.11588/iqas.2017.1-2.4075},
 abstract = {Transformation is apparent in Nepal, a country that underwent a decade of civil war 1996-2006, abolished the monarchy to become a republic in 2007, agreed on a new constitution in 2015 and is currently struggling to implement federalism. Decentralisation and minority repre-sentation are being put on the political agenda alongside efforts to rebuild infrastructure dam-aged through two major earthquakes. Beyond this, Nepal appears to have developed into South Asia's beacon of gender equality. Since 2016 Nepal has had a woman president, a woman chief justice and a woman speaker of parliament. Implementing a quota of 33 per cent women in politics, women politicians now come from a great variety of backgrounds reflecting Nepal's ethnic, cultural, regional and educational diversity. This study takes the entry of 197 female members into the constituent assembly of Nepal in 2008 as a baseline to study the transforma-tion of "patriarchy" and its impact on the heterogeneous group of women politicians in high office in Nepal.},
 keywords = {Nepal; Nepal; Elite; elite; Frau; woman; Gender; gender; Patriarchat; patriarchy; Intersektionalität; intersectionality; Gleichstellung; affirmative action; Politikerin; ; politische Partizipation; political participation; Südasien; South Asia}}