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DPU Working Paper - No. 173

Wellbeing happens in relationship: Implications for women, children and development practice

WP173

4 May 2015

Author: Sara Brayford

Publication Date: May 2015

ISSN: 1474-3280

The complexity of the dynamics of women鈥檚 and children鈥檚 relationships cannot be underestimated. However, the trends in development policy practice either fail to give an adequate account of women and children as individuals who can exercise agency in their own development, or view women as a development dream in which women simultaneously promote child welfare, earn income, and manage community assets.

This paper positions well-being of women and children within a capability approach framework, thus underscoring the significance of well-being on the personal level and highlighting the ways in which well-being is influenced by relationships with others. The paper draws out the variegated ways in which 鈥渨ell-being happens in relationship鈥 (White, 2010). Relating with others is a central capability on its own, but membership in or affiliation to groups or kin can also generate more capabilities and freedoms through collective action, others鈥 external capabilities, and the support given through relationships of love and care. Nevertheless, the quality of relationships, including the power dynamics, trade-offs, and inherent social norms implicated in relationships, colours the extent to which relationships contribute to expanding one鈥檚 overall capability set. This paper integrates theory with a discussion of its practical implications, and broad recommendations are made for how a relational understanding of women and children鈥檚 well-being could be recognised in development policy and practice.

sara.brayford@googlemail.com

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