Gary Barker’s research while affiliated with Collège d'Études Ostéopathiques de Montréal and other places

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Publications (1)


COVID-19 and Masculinities in Global Perspective: Reflections from Promundo’s Research and Activism
  • Article

March 2021

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5 Reads

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6 Citations

Men and Masculinities

Gary Barker

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Stephen Burrell

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COVID-19 has affected individuals and communities in gendered ways. A spike in men’s violence against women has been documented in multiple settings. Women have faced disproportionate job losses in many countries. Men have died at higher rates from COVID-19 for both biological and social causes. Masculinist responses by some national leaders, and men’s lower propensity to adhere to COVID-19 related health recommendations are also gendered. Research further confirms that both women and men in the context of heterosexual households increased their time devoted to unpaid care, even as women’s increases were generally higher. In the face of these challenges some NGOs increased programming to engage men in violence prevention and carried out advocacy to promote men’s more equitable participation in unpaid care work. As the world recovers from the pandemic in 2021, an understanding of how masculinities and gender norms and power dynamics affect recover will be vital.

Citations (1)


... In the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, some studies have reported expressions of masculinity that weakened traditional gender role differentiations at the household level, boosted cooperation rather than conflict and violence, and improved male participation in domestic work and childcare (Bühler et al. 2021;Carlson et al. 2022a;Karadeniz and Çakmakcı 2021;Zossou 2021). Similarly, Barker et al. (2021) and Baral (2021) suggest that the pandemic presented an opportunity for some men to embrace previously unexplored aspects of masculinity. ...

Reference:

Pandemic masculinity: urban low-income men and the Covid-19 pandemic in Nigeria
COVID-19 and Masculinities in Global Perspective: Reflections from Promundo’s Research and Activism
  • Citing Article
  • March 2021

Men and Masculinities