2019/2020 KAN-CCBLV1025U Ethnic and Gender Lenses for Business, Innovation and Sustainable Development
English Title | |
Ethnic and Gender Lenses for Business, Innovation and Sustainable Development |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Start time of the course | Autumn |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 60 |
Study board |
Study Board for BSc and MSc in Business, Language and Culture,
MSc
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Last updated on 05-03-2019 |
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Course content, structure and pedagogical approach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Among businesses, decision-makers and investors seeking ways for implementing the Sustainable Development Goals there is increasing recognition of the need to incorporate gender and race into investment analysis and development policy. A failure to understand the significance of gender and race relations can interfere not only with the fulfillment of policy objectives but also sustainability prospects. In this class, we will explore/discuss how gender relations affect women’s choices and participation in the entrepreneurial activities; solutions embraced as well as sustainability prospects. We will also consider the ways that race, and its intersections with gender, continue to be central to the discourse and practices of the development sector.
This course consists of four modules, not including the introductory and concluding sessions. The first two modules cover scholarly and policy debates about the relationship between gender and development and race and development respectively. These sessions will cover feminist and postcolonial scholarship on development, women’s relationship to the economy and environment (including the centrality of reproduction and reproductive health), and the significance of the historical legacies of race and racism in the origins of major development institutions for the legitimacy and effectiveness of these institutions today. The final section of the second module will bring the first two modules together to consider the intersectionality of race and gender in development, for example, through a focus on the labour of low-income women in the global South and its place within development approaches.
The third module will consist of a series of country and regional case studies that draw attention to different issues at the intersection of gender, race and development. These might include: gender dynamics in a specific locality; access to resources; women’s everyday lives and survival strategies; reproduction/fertility and population; women’s relationship with the environment; cultural tensions between development practitioners and the recipients of development aid. The course will include examples and cases from all continents to demonstrate women’s heterogeneity and individuality across the globe.
The fourth module turns to practice, and considers alternatives to mainstream development and investment models that have the potential to be more inclusive and sustainable on gender and racial lines. These will include gender lens impact investing and participatory development. These models and others will be examined to consider both their implications for generating financial gains as well as specific social and environmental beneficial effects. |
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Description of the teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
There will be a combination of lectures drawing on different disciplines and presentations with active student participation. Each session will be divided between a one-hour lecture on the session topic, and a period of discussion (during the first three modules) or group activity (during the fourth, practice-oriented, module). This will ensure a balance between the dissemination of key information by the instructors and the opportunity for participatory collaborative and blending forms of learning. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback will be offered as follows: 1. in class usually at the beginning of each lecture there will be an open Q&A session; in addition to feedback offered in interaction with students during class and following group exercises during class time 2. in relation to a short presentation of idea formulation during the last section of the course, and before students continue to work in their final group written report. 3. during office hours for all the faculty involved in this course. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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