Officer, Primary Healthcare Initiative (a joint initiative of IIM Udaipur and Basic Healthcare Services), Udaipur, 313 001 INDIA.
Programme Executive, Family Empowerment Programme, Aajeevika Bureau, Udaipur, 313 001, INDIA.
Indian J Med Ethics. 2020 Oct-Dec;V(4):1-14. doi: 10.20529/IJME.2020.086.
The spread of Covid-19 and the lockdown have brought in acute deprivation for rural, marginalised communities with loss of wages, returnee migrants and additional state-imposed barriers to accessing facilities and public provisions. Patriarchal norms amplified in such a crisis along with gender-blind state welfare policies have rendered women in these communities "invisible". This has impacted their access to healthcare, nutrition and social security, and significantly increased their unpaid work burden. Several manifestations of violence, and mental stress have surfaced, diminishing their bare minimum agency and rights and impacting their overall health and wellbeing. This article looks at these gendered implications in the context of rural, tribal and high migrant areas of South Rajasthan. We have adopted an intersectional approach to highlight how intersections of several structures across multiple sites of power: the public, the private space of the home and the woman's intimate space, have reduced them to ultra-vulnerable groups.
Covid-19 的传播和封锁给农村、边缘社区带来了严重的贫困,他们失去了工资,返乡移民以及国家进一步设置障碍,阻止他们获得设施和公共供应。在这种危机中,父权规范加剧,而对性别漠不关心的国家福利政策使得这些社区的妇女“隐形”。这影响了她们获得医疗保健、营养和社会保障的机会,并大大增加了她们的无酬工作负担。暴力和精神压力的几种表现形式已经出现,削弱了她们最基本的代理和权利,并影响了她们的整体健康和幸福。本文着眼于拉贾斯坦邦南部农村、部落和移民地区的这些性别影响。我们采用了交叉方法来强调在多个权力场所:公共、家庭私人空间和妇女的私人空间,这些场所是如何通过多种结构的交叉,使她们沦为超弱势群体。