More than a public health crisis: A feminist political economic analysis of COVID-19

Julia Smith, Sara E. Davies, Huiyun Feng, Connie C.R. Gan, Karen A. Grépin, Sophie Harman, Asha Herten-Crabb, Rosemary Morgan, Nimisha Vandan, Clare Wenham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Gender norms, roles and relations differentially affect women, men, and non-binary individuals’ vulnerability to disease. Outbreak response measures also have immediate and long-term gendered effects. However, gender-based analysis of outbreaks and responses is limited by lack of data and little integration of feminist analysis within global health scholarship. Recognising these barriers, this paper applies a gender matrix methodology, grounded in feminist political economy approaches, to evaluate the gendered effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and response in four case studies: China, Hong Kong, Canada, and the UK. Through a rapid scoping of documentation of the gendered effects of the outbreak, it applies the matrix framework to analyse findings, identifying common themes across the case studies: financial discrimination, crisis in care, and unequal risks and secondary effects. Results point to transnational structural conditions which put women on the front lines of the pandemic at work and at home while denying them health, economic and personal security–effects that are exacerbated where racism and other forms of discrimination intersect with gender inequities. Given that women and people living at the intersections of multiple inequities are made additionally vulnerable by pandemic responses, intersectional feminist responses should be prioritised at the beginning of any crises.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1364-1380
Number of pages17
JournalGlobal public health
Volume16
Issue number8-9
DOIs
StatePublished - 2021

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Gender
  • feminist
  • political economy
  • women

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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