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Gender equality and sustainable development are interspersed tropes of cultural praxis since time immemorial (since the time Lady Macbeth’s name has not been probed into or Nation being equated with mother). The dichotomy of naturalizing women and feminizing nature with identical yet silenced forces of control, reproduction and nurture puts to the multifaceted question of whether the male’s control really masquerades as protection for the female (a territory to be conquered, dominated or shielded against inequalities) and the country (against anthropocentrism, globalization and biomedical apocalypse). On one hand, it cements the metonymic male and the metaphorical female and on the other hand, poses whether technology, as a social context, mired in contemporary social relations and ambits, can come to the rescue. Through a diagnostic and qualitative approach of content analysis, it explores the productive role of gender in the building of sustainable cultures, reboots the fundamental interconnectedness of gender equality and sustainable development. Additionally, it interrogates the workable spaces of the dehumanizing gender discrimination as rightly perceived by United Nations unpacking the irony of gender inequality. This is also critical in elucidating the causality through the stances of capitalism and Structural-functionalism.
gender equality, inequalities, sustainable development
gender equality, inequalities, sustainable development
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