This article traces the theoretical foundations, evolution, and limitations of Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA +), which is the Government of Canada's primary framework for attending to diversity and inclusion in public policy. We argue that GBA + is, in its current form, inadequate to guide ambitious and transformative policy in the post-pandemic years given four interlocking issues: (1) a weak integration of intersectionality; (2) insufficient attention to the power structures and socio-political context undergirding social relations and policymaking; (3) an instrumental understanding of policy; and (4) a misreading of identity. Drawing on feminist, intersectional and post-structuralist methods, we adjust the GBA + framework with the aim of addressing the conceptual shortcomings identified in our analysis. Ultimately, we demonstrate how a more explicit engagement with notions of intersectionality, power and policy's instrumental and productive aspects can enrich the ways we think about public policy as both a mechanism and a venue for transformative change.
CITATION STYLE
Cameron, A. I., & Tedds, L. M. (2023). Canada’s GBA+ framework in a (post)pandemic world: Issues, tensions and paths forward. Canadian Public Administration, 66(1), 7–27. https://doi.org/10.1111/capa.12508
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