Skip to product information
1 of 1

Girls, Power and International Development

Regular price $119.95
Regular price $119.95 Sale price $119.95
Sold out
The United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up campaign has been critiqued for depoliticising global and gender inequalities, portraying girls from the Global South as responsible for lifting entire commu...
Read More
  • 24 June 2025
View Product Details

The United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up campaign has been critiqued for depoliticising global and gender inequalities, portraying girls from the Global South as responsible for lifting entire communities out of poverty and encouraging girls in the Global North to see themselves as the saviours of their Southern counterparts.

Drawing on focus groups with Girl Up members from the UK, US and Malawi, this book demonstrates how girls reflect critically on the Girl Up discourse, reject its individualistic vision of girls’ empowerment and interact with their Northern/Southern counterparts in a spirit of mutual learning and respect. Its analysis demonstrates how the girls use participation in the campaign to develop their own more complex, radical and collective visions of girls’ empowerment.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $119.95
Pages: 240
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Series: Gender, Sexuality and Global Politics
Publication Date: 24 June 2025
ISBN: 9781529238457
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, International relations, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Economy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, Political activism / Political engagement, Gender studies: women and girls
REVIEWS Icon
‘Walters provides an original and sophisticated analysis of the girlpowering of international development that substantially advances debates across a range of fields and makes for essential reading.' Adrienne Roberts, The University of Manchester
Rosie Walters is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at Cardiff University’s School of Law and Politics with research interests in feminist, poststructuralist and postcolonial approaches to international relations.

1. Introduction

2. The Girl in Global Politics

3. Feminist Activism Within and Against Neoliberalism

4. The Girl Up Discourse

5. ‘We Need to Talk’: Celebrity Feminism and Girls’ Activism amid Global Crisis

6. Girls’ Readings of Girl Up

7. Girl Up Members’ Feminist Activism

8. Ubuntu Feminism in a Lilongwean Girl Up Club

9. ‘It’s Like, Do You Wanna Go to Girl Up or Do You Wanna Go to Tesco?’: Ambivalent Activism in the Global North

10. Crossing North–South Divides in Research with Girl Activists

11. Conclusions: Hope and False Hope in the Fight for Girls’ Rights