Description

Book Synopsis

Analyzes the politics of neoliberal health sector reform and its effects in Peru. Focuses on the intersecting dynamics of race, class, and gender in the developing world.



Trade Review

“Christina Ewig has written a first-rate book that makes contributions on several different levels. On the one hand, it integrates central political science concerns about the impact of welfare legacies and epistemic communities with a growing literature on gender equality and politics. At the same time, the book explores these issues through a compelling history of Peruvian health policy, focusing especially on the evolution of services shaped in response to the demands of male-dominated unions and then on efforts to restructure the system in the 1990s and early 2000s. Ewig’s analysis is all the more impressive because it is informed by extensive fieldwork that she conducted in Peru over the course of several years. Besides the obvious appeal this book will have for specialists in Peru, it should be of great interest to students of comparative social policy and of the complex politics of gender, intersectionality, and historical legacies.”

—Robert Kaufman,Rutgers University


“Christina Ewig's book, with its focus on the social dimensions of social policy, is a most welcome contribution to the study of social policy in Latin America. Its examination of the gendered and racialized impacts of neoliberal reforms in social provision is richly illustrated by case studies from Ewig's many years of fieldwork in Peru. It leaves the reader in no doubt that deep social inequalities in provision persist largely unchallenged. Ewig convincingly shows that if women's rights organizations are to address these inequalities, they need to pay greater attention both to the power politics of policymaking processes and to the consequences of neoliberal reforms, such as decentralization and privatization, for disadvantaged populations. This book will be essential reading across a range of disciplines and will be valued especially for tackling previously under-researched issues in the social policy field.”

—Maxine Molyneux,Institute for the Study of the Americas, School of Advanced Study, University of London


“In Second-Wave Neoliberalism, Christina Ewig offers careful and skilled intersectional analysis of the complex arena of policy reform—and this outstanding book is an example of such research at its best. Ewig's narrative emphasizes the centrality of gender, race, and class to the process of health sector reform and thus demonstrates the importance of looking at all three factors when assessing policy change. The book is a tremendous contribution to the gender and feminist studies literature.”

—Lynne Haney,New York University


“Cristina Ewig skillfully shows us gendered inequality in access to basic services cannot be attributed solely to neoliberal reforms, especially in Peru. . . . Hopefully students of policy, health reform and Latin American politics will all see the benefit of this.”

—Jelke Boesten Journal of Latin American Studies


“Graduate students and professionals alike will find this extensive and constantly engaging research beneficial because it raises important questions and gives valuable insights for those in the field of gender and social policy.”

—Constanza Tabbush Bulletin of Latin American Research



Table of Contents

Contents

List of Tables and Figures

Preface and Acknowledgments

List of Acronyms

1. Intersecting Legacies of Inequality

2. Colonization and Co-optation: Historical Legacies of Inequality in the State Health System

3. Global Currents: Neoliberal and “Rights-Based” Development Paradigms

4. Gendered Divisions: The National Politics of Health Reform

5. Mimicking Markets: Gender Equity and Public Health System Reforms

6. Controlling Poor Women’s Bodies: Intersections of Race, Gender, and Family Planning Policy

7. Insuring Gender Equity? Public and Private Insurance Schemes

Conclusion

Methodological Appendix

References

Index

SecondWave Neoliberalism Gender Race and Health Sector Reform in Peru

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    A Paperback by Christina Ewig

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      View other formats and editions of SecondWave Neoliberalism Gender Race and Health Sector Reform in Peru by Christina Ewig

      Publisher: Penn State University
      Publication Date: 6/15/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780271037127, 978-0271037127
      ISBN10: 0271037121

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Analyzes the politics of neoliberal health sector reform and its effects in Peru. Focuses on the intersecting dynamics of race, class, and gender in the developing world.



      Trade Review

      “Christina Ewig has written a first-rate book that makes contributions on several different levels. On the one hand, it integrates central political science concerns about the impact of welfare legacies and epistemic communities with a growing literature on gender equality and politics. At the same time, the book explores these issues through a compelling history of Peruvian health policy, focusing especially on the evolution of services shaped in response to the demands of male-dominated unions and then on efforts to restructure the system in the 1990s and early 2000s. Ewig’s analysis is all the more impressive because it is informed by extensive fieldwork that she conducted in Peru over the course of several years. Besides the obvious appeal this book will have for specialists in Peru, it should be of great interest to students of comparative social policy and of the complex politics of gender, intersectionality, and historical legacies.”

      —Robert Kaufman,Rutgers University


      “Christina Ewig's book, with its focus on the social dimensions of social policy, is a most welcome contribution to the study of social policy in Latin America. Its examination of the gendered and racialized impacts of neoliberal reforms in social provision is richly illustrated by case studies from Ewig's many years of fieldwork in Peru. It leaves the reader in no doubt that deep social inequalities in provision persist largely unchallenged. Ewig convincingly shows that if women's rights organizations are to address these inequalities, they need to pay greater attention both to the power politics of policymaking processes and to the consequences of neoliberal reforms, such as decentralization and privatization, for disadvantaged populations. This book will be essential reading across a range of disciplines and will be valued especially for tackling previously under-researched issues in the social policy field.”

      —Maxine Molyneux,Institute for the Study of the Americas, School of Advanced Study, University of London


      “In Second-Wave Neoliberalism, Christina Ewig offers careful and skilled intersectional analysis of the complex arena of policy reform—and this outstanding book is an example of such research at its best. Ewig's narrative emphasizes the centrality of gender, race, and class to the process of health sector reform and thus demonstrates the importance of looking at all three factors when assessing policy change. The book is a tremendous contribution to the gender and feminist studies literature.”

      —Lynne Haney,New York University


      “Cristina Ewig skillfully shows us gendered inequality in access to basic services cannot be attributed solely to neoliberal reforms, especially in Peru. . . . Hopefully students of policy, health reform and Latin American politics will all see the benefit of this.”

      —Jelke Boesten Journal of Latin American Studies


      “Graduate students and professionals alike will find this extensive and constantly engaging research beneficial because it raises important questions and gives valuable insights for those in the field of gender and social policy.”

      —Constanza Tabbush Bulletin of Latin American Research



      Table of Contents

      Contents

      List of Tables and Figures

      Preface and Acknowledgments

      List of Acronyms

      1. Intersecting Legacies of Inequality

      2. Colonization and Co-optation: Historical Legacies of Inequality in the State Health System

      3. Global Currents: Neoliberal and “Rights-Based” Development Paradigms

      4. Gendered Divisions: The National Politics of Health Reform

      5. Mimicking Markets: Gender Equity and Public Health System Reforms

      6. Controlling Poor Women’s Bodies: Intersections of Race, Gender, and Family Planning Policy

      7. Insuring Gender Equity? Public and Private Insurance Schemes

      Conclusion

      Methodological Appendix

      References

      Index

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