
The Contemporary Reader of Feminist International Relations
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The Contemporary Reader of Feminist International Relations
About this book
The Contemporary Reader of Feminist International Relations is a comprehensive volume for contemporary scholarship on feminist international relations and theory, showcasing research from a range of international scholars.
This collection explores the state of women's and LGBTQi+ rights in the world, feminist contributions to peace, women's and feminist approaches to diplomacy and feminist theorizing on borders, security and the politics of care in the world. It also features interviews and short essays by trailblazers of feminist international relations. The book is composed of six parts, and features case studies, examples, in-depth field research, and conceptual debates prominently in all chapters. Further readings complement the reader's guidance.
The Contemporary Reader of Feminist International Relations is an ideal study companion for students and scholars in Women's and Gender Studies, International Relations, Politics, Peace Studies, and Security Studies.
Chapters 31 and 33 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 license.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half-Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Endorsements
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction: Feminism is for tout le monde
- Part I Listen and learn
- 2 Daring to take women seriously
- 3 What can settler feminisms and feminist IR (un)learn from Indigenous feminisms?
- 4 Global white supremacy in a time of genocide
- 5 Confronting the patriarchy: My journey toward feminist international relations
- 6 How does queer theory/queering advance our understanding of state/nations and structural inequalities?: And why does this matter to feminist international relations?
- 7 Looking for a fight on the gender of diplomacy
- Part II The relational in feminist international relations: Intersections and configurations
- 8 A decolonial feminist non-manifesto
- 9 Third World feminism
- 10 Our caste problem
- 11 Entangled worlds: The intimate, uncomfortable relationship between feminist international relations scholarship and feminist action
- 12 Feminist grassroots organizing in international relations
- 13 On creativity and feminist community
- Part III Gender politics as world-ordering politics
- 14 Women’s security and the WPS agenda
- 15 UN Security Council Resolution 1325
- 16 Worlding women and international law
- 17 Gender in global climate governance
- 18 Thinking about the gender of diplomacy
- 19 Making sense of international LGBTI rights promotion
- 20 Politicized homophobia: Sexual moralism, national identity, and foreign policy
- Part IV Gendering and bordering difference
- 21 Gender, borders, and refugee governance
- 22 Marriage migration: A patchwork of embodied identity and security politics
- 23 Guest worker programs in the Asia Pacific: Why depletion is a persistent feature in the global economy
- 24 Women, violence, and encampment: Understanding gender-based violence against Rohingya women in refugee camps
- 25 Nostalgia and solidarity entanglements: Iranian women in Spain narrating resistance
- 26 Exile
- Part V Gender, violence, and peace
- 27 Are women more peaceful?
- 28 Women combatants in civil wars
- 29 Women’s agentic responses to conflict-related sexual violence
- 30 Male survivors of sexual violence
- 31 Women and peacebuilding in authoritarian and hybrid regimes
- 32 Technology facilitated gender-based violence in the Middle East: A tool of state repression
- 33 Unstitching and restitching gender relations in the reincorporation process of FARC ex-combatants in Colombia
- Part VI Worlding the politics of care
- 34 The ethics of care
- 35 Sadako Ogata, human security, and the ethics of care
- 36 Politics of care: Emancipatory futures in/beyond institutions
- 37 Family matters in world politics
- Index