Gender, Roads, and Mobility in Asia
Edited by Kyoko Kusakabe
Publication date:
15 April 2012Length of book:
240 pagesPublisher
Practical Action PublishingDimensions:
234x156mmISBN-13: 9781853397349
Poor roads and transport infrastructure are key factors in the marginalization of women and other disempowered groups, but there is little understanding of the many ways in which a lack of mobility affects people’s lives. In South-east Asia, huge strides are being made in highway development and regional economic integration. The complex interplay of factors makes the connections discovered both interesting and challenging for study. Do roads necessarily bring economic opportunities and prosperity? How does the possible change in mobility transform the lives of women and marginalized groups? How does the differential impact of these changes on people depend on geographical, social, and historical factors and people’s own capacities to make optimum use of the new resource? Gender, Roads, and Mobility in Asia brings together stories from different points of transformation and what emerges is a nuanced picture of how people’s own positions and capabilities – gender, age, ethnicity, literacy, and education – influence the impact of the infrastructure development on their lives.This book should be read by policy makers, transportation planners, development practitioners and researchers.
‘Finally, a book that does not compromise the complexity of mobility in a transport context. Drawing on mobility as capability, Gender, Roads, and Mobility in Asia brings a variety of much-needed Asian voices to the growing discourse of mobility and social justice, underscoring how the free movement of some is often guaranteed by the immobility of others..’ David O. Kronlid is Docent of Ethics and Senior Lecturer in Curriculum Studies at Uppsala University, Sweden
‘Explosive growth in infrastructure across Asia has implications which extend far beyond transport logistics. This book should be of considerable interest to development planners and regional specialists across a range of disciplines.’ Gina Porter, Senior Research Fellow, Department of Anthropology, Durham University, UK
‘This book successfully demonstrates the need to support women’s capability as part of the core objectives of transport development.’ Sonomi Tanaka, Principal Social Development Specialist (Gender and Development), Asian Development Bank