Person: Innerarity Grau, Carmen
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Innerarity Grau
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Carmen
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Sociología y Trabajo Social
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I-COMMUNITAS. Institute for Advanced Social Research
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0000-0003-1193-8195
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1747
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Publication Open Access Ciudad y ciudadanía. Un análisis de los planes estratégicos de desarrollo urbano desde la perspectiva de género(Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 2014) Innerarity Grau, Carmen; Sancho Martínez, Ana; Sociología; SoziologiaEste estudio se enmarca dentro del análisis de las políticas de planificación urbana desde la perspectiva de género. Parte de la idea de que la inclusión de las mujeres en el espacio público podría estar chocando con un diseño de las ciudades en el que aún pesa mucho la vieja división sexual del trabajo, según el cual a los hombres corresponde una zona de la ciudad (en la que ellos trabajan) y a las mujeres, otra (en la cual ellas residen), haciendo muy difícil, no sólo la inclusión de las mujeres en pie de igualdad, sino también la conciliación tanto por parte de varones como de mujeres. A partir de aquí, el artículo examina en qué medida los planes estratégicos y urbanísticos de ciudades españolas (Bilbao, Barcelona, Zaragoza, Málaga y Jaén) han incluido la perspectiva de género. Concretamente, analiza si los planes recogen las recomendaciones dictadas desde los años noventa por los organismos internacionales –fundamentalmente el Programa de las Naciones Unidas para los Asentamientos Humanos, ONU-Habitat- de cara a la inclusión del género de forma transversal en las políticas de planificación urbana con el fin de hacer 'ciudades conciliadoras'.Publication Open Access Género y urbanismo: ¿hacia ciudades más sensibles e inclusivas?(Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, 2020) Innerarity Grau, Carmen; Acha Ugarte, Beatriz; Sancho Martínez, Ana; Sociología y Trabajo Social; Soziologia eta Gizarte LanaThe purpose of this work is to analyse the extent to which the local councils of the cities of Pamplona and Tudela are including the gender perspective in their urban development policies. The theoretical framework of the study 'is based on', first, the feminist critique of the distinction between the public and the private space, -which leads to a city design where areas for working are separated from areas for caring- and, secondly, the requirement to meet the specific needs of women - including their role as care-givers - to ensure equal access to the city. Based on the documents issued by the Habitat programme in its successive meetings from the first conference, in 1976, until the last one, in 2016, we develop a series of recommendations which may be used as specific indicators to assess the degree of gender mainstreaming in urban planning policies. Based on the systematization of Habitat's proposals, we carry out an analysis of the Equality and Urban Planning Plans of the selected cities, complemented by interviews with members of the technical staff in both areas. Our findings show an uneven development of Habitat's recommendations has taken place in both Pamplona and Tudela; however, a clear awareness also exists that urbanism is not gender-neutral; at the same time, the importance of care provision in urban policies is growing, as can be seen in the introduction of some actions in favour of co-responsibility.Publication Open Access Gender in VOX's ideology: legitimization strategy or central category?(USC Annenberg Press, 2024) Innerarity Grau, Carmen; Pérez-Agote Aguirre, José María; Lasanta Palacios, María; Sociología y Trabajo Social; Soziologia eta Gizarte Lana; Institute for Advanced Social Research - ICOMMUNITAS; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate PublikoaAccording to Mudde's (2007) classic definition, gender does not belong to the characteristic ideological core of far-right parties; it solely responds to a strategy of legitimizing their nativistic antiimmigration agenda. More recently, however, some studies indicate that gender is becoming increasingly central in far-right ideology and point at the need for more research. This article analyzes the keys to VOX's discourse on gender to see to what extent it fits Mudde's definition or whether, on the contrary, gender is a central ideological category for this Spanish far-right party. For this purpose, this article explores interventions in Congress of Deputies during 2020 and 2021. The analysis reveals a strategic use of gender to legitimize its restrictive proposals concerning immigration and, above all, shows gender as a central cross-cutting issue in the three ideological characteristics of the far-right identified by Mudde. Perhaps the marginal place Mudde gave to gender explains the scarcity of empirical studies on the role of gender values in voting for the radical right. Paying more attention to this aspect could expand the understanding of the factors that have driven the growth of the far-right globally, particularly in Europe. Ultimately, it contributes to explaining the relationship between populism and gender in European far-right parties.