Using feminist methodologies to explore female genital mutilation/cutting and child marriage in low- and middle-income contexts.

Frontiers in research metrics and analytics Pub Date : 2024-12-18 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frma.2024.1330289
Nicola Jones, Kate Pincock, Sarah Alheiwidi
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Abstract

This paper discusses how harmful practices such as child marriage and female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) can be effectively explored through feminist methodologies that center the lived experiences of girls and young women affected by these issues. Eliminating harmful practices, which are rooted in gender inequality and have myriad life-course consequences for those who experience them, has become a global priority in recent years. However, dominant conceptualizations of the drivers and consequences of child marriage and FGM/C often fail to adequately engage with or reflect adolescent girls' own nuanced experiences and perceptions. A feminist epistemology underlines the need for research methods that can uncover and address dynamics of power and inequality, as well as the complexities of voice and agency surrounding these practices, both of which perpetuate harmful practices and marginalize the voices of those who are most affected. The paper discusses adaptations to two key sets of methodological tools used with adolescent girls in research on FGM/C in Ethiopia and on child marriage in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Jordan, and Lebanon as part of the Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence (GAGE) longitudinal study. The purpose of these tools was to address and shift power inequalities, both within the research process and in girls' lives more widely. The Social Network Hexagon, Marriage Chain, and Marriage Decision-Making Pairs tools were used to explore child marriage decision-making processes and dynamics and outcomes for adolescent girls. A vignette-based discussion on FGM/C and child marriage and a version of a Social Network Hexagon tool were used to improve understanding of adolescents' social networks and the extent to which these shape their options for change. We find that context-specific adaptations to the tools, determined through ongoing reflexive dialogue with local researchers, were key to creating space for deep reflection and engagement by girls. Exploring the wider structural and social dynamics that enable and constrain girls' agency and decision-making around harmful practices was also key. It enabled insights into the complex ways in which gender- and age-based social norms are exercised within girls' socio-ecological contexts, as well as possible entry points for change.

利用女权主义方法探讨中低收入环境中的切割女性生殖器官和童婚问题。
本文讨论了如何通过以受这些问题影响的女孩和年轻妇女的生活经历为中心的女权主义方法,有效地探讨诸如童婚和切割女性生殖器(FGM/C)等有害习俗。近年来,消除有害习俗已成为全球优先事项,这些习俗植根于性别不平等,并对经历过这些习俗的人的一生产生无数影响。然而,关于童婚和切割女性生殖器官的驱动因素和后果的主流概念往往未能充分考虑或反映少女自己的细微经历和看法。女权主义认识论强调需要研究方法来揭示和解决权力和不平等的动态,以及围绕这些做法的声音和代理的复杂性,这两者都使有害的做法永久化,并使受影响最大的人的声音边缘化。作为性别与青春期:全球证据(GAGE)纵向研究的一部分,本文讨论了对两套关键方法工具的调整,这些工具分别用于研究埃塞俄比亚的女性生殖器切割和孟加拉国、埃塞俄比亚、约旦和黎巴嫩的童婚。这些工具的目的是在研究过程和更广泛的女孩生活中解决和改变权力不平等。本研究采用社会网络六边形、婚姻链和婚姻决策对工具,探讨少女童婚的决策过程、动态和结果。通过关于切割女性生殖器官和童婚的小插图讨论和社会网络六边形工具的一个版本,提高了对青少年社会网络的理解,以及这些网络在多大程度上影响了他们的改变选择。我们发现,通过与当地研究人员进行持续的反思性对话,对工具进行特定情境的调整,是为女孩创造深度反思和参与空间的关键。探索促进和限制女童在有害做法方面的能动性和决策权的更广泛的结构和社会动态也是关键。它使人们能够深入了解基于性别和年龄的社会规范在女孩的社会生态环境中发挥作用的复杂方式,以及可能的变革切入点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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