Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/136
Title: Gender concepts
Authors: TCDC, MS
Keywords: Gender
Issue Date: 2012
Abstract: Gender refers to the roles and responsibilities of men and women that are created in our families, our societies and our cultures. The concept of gender also includes the expectations held about the characteristics, aptitudes and likely behaviours of both women and men (femininity and masculinity). Gender roles and expectations are learned. They can change over time and they vary within and between cultures. Systems of social differentiation such as political status, class, ethnicity, physical and mental disability, age and more, modify gender roles. The concept of gender is vital because, applied to social analysis; it reveals how women’s subordination (or men’s domination) is socially constructed. As such, the subordination can be changed or ended. It is not biologically predetermined nor is it fixed forever.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/136
Appears in Collections:Gender



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