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Smashing the patriarchy to address gender health inequities : past, present and future perspectives from Aotearoa (New Zealand) Heather Came, Anna Matheson and Jacquie Kidd

By: Came, Heather.
Contributor(s): Matheson, Anna | Kidd, Jacquie.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Global Public Health: An International Journal for Research, Policy and Practice.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2021Subject(s): DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | FEMINISM | HEALTH | INTERSECTIONALITY | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | MĀORI | REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH | WOMEN | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2021.1937272 In: Global Public Health: An International Journal for Research, Policy and Practice, 2021, Advance online publication, 7 June 2021Summary: The second wave feminist dream of smashing the patriarchy remains a task yet to be completed on a complex to do list. Women, particularly able-bodied cis-gendered white women however do enjoy the privilege of living longer than men. But our longer lives take place within patriarchal-capitalist systems where many women’s social and cultural rights continue to be compromised. How do we ensure that all women can exercise our right to health and wellbeing? In this paper, the authors examine, critique, review and re-vision the dynamics of power and patriarchy over three distinct time periods – 1999, 2019 and 2039. We look to the past to track progress; we look to the present to see what we have achieved and look to the future for what might be. This conceptual paper is informed by the authors’ expert knowledge, a review of the literature and the novel use of speculative ethnography. The authors conclude that patriarchy remains not only a negative determinant of women’s health that needs to be smashed, but is also a threat to all people and to planetary health. (Authors' abstract). Record #7180
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Global Public Health: An International Journal for Research, Policy and Practice, 2021, Advance online publication, 7 June 2021

The second wave feminist dream of smashing the patriarchy remains a task yet to be completed on a complex to do list. Women, particularly able-bodied cis-gendered white women however do enjoy the privilege of living longer than men. But our longer lives take place within patriarchal-capitalist systems where many women’s social and cultural rights continue to be compromised. How do we ensure that all women can exercise our right to health and wellbeing? In this paper, the authors examine, critique, review and re-vision the dynamics of power and patriarchy over three distinct time periods – 1999, 2019 and 2039. We look to the past to track progress; we look to the present to see what we have achieved and look to the future for what might be. This conceptual paper is informed by the authors’ expert knowledge, a review of the literature and the novel use of speculative ethnography. The authors conclude that patriarchy remains not only a negative determinant of women’s health that needs to be smashed, but is also a threat to all people and to planetary health. (Authors' abstract). Record #7180