Research Article

(En)gendering Development: Mapping Spatial Contours of Urban Inequality in Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Authors

  • Maha Panju Department of Gender, The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Extending feminist geographic endeavours in the present geopolitical conjuncture, this critical intervention calls into question the everyday gendered geographies of Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) in their contextual heterogeneity. In the epoch of conspicuous consumption, women-dominated shopping malls in the Gulf space can be read as material-discursive sites in and through which gendered belonging is (re)constructed. Paradoxically, frenetic economic development is marked by deeply entrenched logics of segregation, unearthing conditions of unbelonging. In particular, urbanity is predicated upon the abjection of ‘bachelors’ (low-wage immigrant men of South Asian descent) from the Emirati body politic. I then employ intersectional frameworks to counter-map the affective contours of Dubai’s urban sexscape, where spatially and temporally provisional moments of queer existence (re)surface at nighttime. Similarly, intersectional feminist geographies of sex work grapple with existing and emergent strands of spatial inequality in ways a single-axis framework cannot hope to exhaust. Whilst sexed/gendered/racialised bodies are hierarchically stratified in Emirati moral economies of transactional sex, sex worker subjectivities at once refuse rigidly boxed categories by being continually reworked at the local, national and global levels.

Article information

Journal

Journal of Gender, Culture and Society

Volume (Issue)

4 (1)

Pages

47-51

Published

2024-05-16

How to Cite

Panju, M. (2024). (En)gendering Development: Mapping Spatial Contours of Urban Inequality in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Journal of Gender, Culture and Society, 4(1), 47–51. https://doi.org/10.32996/jgcs.2024.4.1.6

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Keywords:

Dubai, UAE, Gender, Urbanisation, Spatial Inequality, Feminist geography, Intersectionality