Women and the 'Business' of Human Rights: The Problem with Women's Empowerment Projects and the Need for Corporate Reform

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Abstract

Corporate-led women's empowerment initiatives appear, in their proactiveness, to be a welcome addition to a range of measures addressing adverse human rights impacts by business. This article questions the claim that these projects significantly advance women's rights. Instead, they can be understood as a manifestation of what Catherine Rottenberg terms 'neoliberal feminism' with women at risk of being transformed into 'gender capital' for business gain. This article rejects the claim that empowerment can only be delivered by encouraging women into market-based work. Instead, it is argued that the corporate responsibility to respect the human rights of women can better be supported by reorienting business away from its preoccupation with delivering value for shareholders, towards an approach that values women's unpaid socially reproductive labour.

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APA

Russell, R. (2022). Women and the “Business” of Human Rights: The Problem with Women’s Empowerment Projects and the Need for Corporate Reform. Business and Human Rights Journal, 7(1), 84–99. https://doi.org/10.1017/bhj.2021.50

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