Despite various decades of research and claim-making by feminist scholars and movements, gender remains an overlooked area in development studies. Looking at key issues in development studies through the prisms of gender and feminism, the authors demonstrate that gender is an indispensable tool for social change.Introduction: Gender, a Necessary Tool of Analysis for Social Change; Isabelle Gu?rin, H?l?ne Gu?tat-Bernard and Christine Verschuur PART I: DISCIPLINES 1. A History of Development through a Gender Prism. Feminist and Decolonial Perspectives; Christine Verschuur 2. Feminist Anthropology Meets Development; Fenneke Reysoo 3. Gender and Demography. A Fertile Combination; Agn?s Adjamagbo and Th?r?se Locoh 4. The sociologist and the 'poor Third World woman', or how an approach focusing on gender relations has helped sociology of development; Blandine Destremau and Bruno Lautier 5. Feminist Development Economics an Institutional Approach to Household Analysis; Irene van Staveren and Olasunbo Odebode 6. Feminist Legal Theory as an Intervention in Development Debates; Isabel Cristina Jaramillo 7. Feminist Interventions in International Relations; Elisabeth Pr?gl PART II: SPECIFIC ISSUES 8. Labour, family and agriculture: gender and development issues, a North-South perspective; H?l?ne Gu?tat-Bernard 9. Revisiting the Migration/Development Nexus from a Gender Perspective. Articulating Production and Reproduction; Christine Catarino and Laura Oso 10. Ambivalent Engagements, Paradoxical Effects: Latin American Feminist and Women's Movements and/in/against Development; Sonia E. Alvarez 11. Neoliberal Capitalism: an Ally for Women? Materialist and Imbricationist Feminist Perspectives; Jules Falquet 12. Neoliberalism and the Global Economic Crisis: a View from Feminist Economics; Lourdes Beneria 13. The solidarity economy revisited in the light of gender: a tool for social change or reproducing the subordination of women?; Isabelle Gu?rin and Mariam Nobre 14. Conclusion. l£6