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  1. Intersectionality examines how a person’s identities, such as their gender, ethnicity, and sexuality, affect their access to opportunities and privileges. First coined in 1989, the theory has since been applied to employment, housing, healthcare, and so on. In this article, we’ll define what intersectionality is, explain the facts everyone ...

  2. The evidence that gender norms affect health has led many UN agencies and civil society partners to embrace gender-responsive programming that begins in early adolescence. 7 However, few of these programmes have applied an intersectionality lens to tackle how gender norms intersect and interact with other dimensions of young adolescents’ social and structural realities—such as their social ...

  3. Intersectionality is a useful paradigm for understanding the meaning and consequences of multiple categories of social group membership during adolescence, including race and ethnicity, gender, social class, and sexuality (Hancock, 2007; Shields, 2008; Velez and Spencer, 2018).

  4. May 17, 2023 · Why Intersectionality Is Important. Caring for Yourself. Intersectionality acknowledges that each individual has multiple identities and is subject to various forms of intersecting oppression. This article will review the term's history, examples of intersectionality, why it is important, and how you can use this knowledge to create change.

  5. Sep 1, 2021 · Given increasing policy attention to the consequences of youth marginalisation for development processes, engaging with the experiences of socially marginalised adolescents in low- and middle-income countries (including those who are out of school, refugees, married, with disabilities or adolescent parents) is a pressing priority. To understand how these disadvantages—and adolescents ...

    • Sarah Baird, Laura Camfield, Anita Ghimire, Bassam Abu Hamad, Nicola Jones, Kate Pincock, Tassew Wol...
    • 2021
  6. Oct 31, 2023 · Discrimination is the unfair treatment of someone based on aspects of their identity, such as race, gender, or religion. It's the opposite of privilege; it puts people at a disadvantage. Think of intersectionality like a 3D puzzle. A single puzzle piece might represent one aspect of your identity—let's say, your gender.

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  8. Oct 29, 2021 · We then present an analysis of Black and White adolescents’ race × gender identities to conceptualize identity and intersectionality as phenomena that can be measured at the personal, relational, and structural levels. We conclude that this multilevel analytical framework allows us to see intersectionality in identity development.

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