Andersson, Elias
- Department of Forest Resource Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2018Peer reviewed
Andersson, Elias; Johansson, Maria; Lidestav, Gun; Lindberg, Malin
-Purpose: In Sweden, gender mainstreaming policies have a long political
history. As part of the national gender equality strategy of the Swedish forest
industry, the ten largest forestry companies committed themselves to gender
mainstream their policies. Limiting the impact of policies and the agency of
change, the purpose of this paper is to focus on the varied and conflicting
meanings and constitution of the concepts, the problem and, in extent, the
organisational realities of gender mainstreaming. Design/methodology/approach:
In both, implementation and practice, gender mainstreaming posse challenges on
various levels and by analysing these documents as practical texts from the
WPR-approach. This paper explores constructions of gender and gender equality
and their implications on the practice and the political of gender
mainstreaming in a male-dominated primary industry.
Findings:
The results show that the organisations themselves were not constituted as the
subject of the policy but instead some of the individuals (women). The subject
position of women represented in company policy was one of lacking skills and
competences and in the need of help. Not only men and the masculine norms but
organisational processes and structures were also generally invisible in the
material. Power and conflict were mainly absent from the understanding of gender
equality. Instead, consenting ideas of gender equality were the focus. Such
conceptualisations of gender equality are beneficial for all risk concealing
power structures and thereby limit the political space for change.
Originality/value:
By highlighting the scale of policy and the significance of organisational
contexts, the results indicate how gender and gender equality are constitutive
through the governing technologies of neoliberal and market-oriented ideologies
in policy – emphasising the further limiting of space for structural change and
politicalization within the male-dominated organisations of Swedish forest
industry.
Governance; Politics; Policy; Forestry; Male-dominated organizations; Subjectification
Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal
2018, Volume: 37, number: 8, pages: 763-779
SDG5 Gender equality
SDG10 Reduced inequalities
Gender Studies
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/EDI-10-2017-0208
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/97161