Ebola, gender and conspicuously invisible women in global health governance

Author(s)
Harman, S.
Pages
24pp
Date published
01 Jan 2015
Publisher
Third World Quarterly
Type
Articles
Keywords
Assessment & Analysis, Epidemics & pandemics, Gender

The international response to Ebola brings into stark contention the conspicuous invisibility of women and gender in global health governance. Developing feminist research on gender blindness, care and male bias, this article uses Ebola as a case to explore how global health rests on the conspicuous free labour of women in formal and informal care roles, yet renders women invisible in policy and practice. The article does so by demonstrating the conspicuous invisibility of women and gender in narratives on Ebola, emergency and long-term strategies to contain the disease, and in the health system strengthening plans of the World Health Organization and World Bank.