The postcolonial science and technology studies reader by Sandra Harding

By Sandra Harding

For 20 years, the popular thinker of technological know-how Sandra Harding has argued that technological know-how and expertise reports, postcolonial stories, and feminist critique needs to tell each other. In The Postcolonial technology and know-how experiences Reader, Harding places these fields in severe dialog, assembling the anthology that she has lengthy sought after for school room use. In vintage and up to date essays, foreign students from a number of disciplines imagine via a extensive array of technological know-how and know-how philosophies and practices. The participants reevaluate traditional money owed of the West’s clinical and technological tasks long ago and current, reconsider the strengths and barriers of non-Western societies’ wisdom traditions, and investigate the legacies of colonialism and imperialism. the gathering concludes with forward-looking essays, which discover techniques for cultivating new visions of a multicultural, democratic international of sciences and for turning these visions into realities. Feminist technological know-how and expertise matters run in the course of the reader and are the point of interest of numerous essays. Harding offers worthy history for every essay in her introductions to the reader’s 4 sections.

Contributors
Helen Appleton
Karen Bäckstrand
Lucille H. Brockway
Stephen B. Brush
Judith Carney
Committee on ladies, inhabitants, and the Environment
Arturo Escobar
Maria E. Fernandez
Ward H. Goodenough
Susantha Goonatilake
Sandra Harding
Steven J. Harris
Betsy Hartmann
Cori Hayden
Catherine L. M. Hill
John M. Hobson
Peter Mühlhäusler
Catherine A. Odora Hoppers
Consuelo Quiroz
Jenny Reardon
Ella Reitsma
Ziauddin Sardar
Daniel Sarewitz
Londa Schiebinger
Catherine V. Scott
Colin Scott
Mary Terrall
D. Michael Warren

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A Companion to Feminist Geography by Lise Nelson, Joni Seager

By Lise Nelson, Joni Seager

A significant other to Feminist Geography captures the breadth and variety of this vivid and noticeable box.

  • Shows how feminist geography has replaced the panorama of geographical inquiry and information because the Seventies.
  • Explores the various literatures that include feminist geography at the present time.
  • Showcases state-of-the-art examine through feminist geographers.
  • Charts rising parts of scholarship, comparable to the physique and the kingdom.
  • Contributions from 50 top foreign students within the box.
  • Each bankruptcy could be learn for its personal specified contribution.

Content:
Chapter 1 creation (pages 1–11): Lise Nelson and Joni Seager
Chapter 2 Situating Gender (pages 15–31): Liz Bondi and Joyce Davidson
Chapter three Anti?Racist Feminism in Geography: An schedule for Social motion (pages 32–40): Audrey Kobayashi
Chapter four A physically suggestion of study: energy, distinction, and Specificity in Feminist technique (pages 41–59): Pamela Moss
Chapter five Transnational Mobilities and demanding situations (pages 60–73): Brenda S. A. Yeoh
Chapter 6 Feminist Analyses of labor: Rethinking the limits, Gendering, and Spatiality of labor (pages 77–92): Kim England and Victoria Lawson
Chapter 7 Shea Butter, Globalization, and ladies of Burkina Faso (pages 93–108): Marlene Elias and Judith Carney
Chapter eight engaged on the worldwide meeting Line (pages 109–122): Altha J. Cravey
Chapter nine From Migrant to Immigrant: household employees Settle in Vancouver, Canada (pages 123–137): Geraldine Pratt
Chapter 10 Borders, Embodiment, and Mobility: Feminist Migration stories in Geography (pages 138–149): Rachel Silvey
Chapter eleven The altering Roles of lady hard work in monetary enlargement and Decline: The Case of the Istanbul garments (pages 150–165): Ayda Eraydyn and Asuman Turkun?Erendil
Chapter 12 lady hard work in intercourse Trafficking: A Darker aspect of Globalization (pages 166–178): Vidyamali Samarasinghe
Chapter thirteen altering the Gender of Entrepreneurship (pages 179–193): Susan Hanson and Megan Blake
Chapter 14 Gender and Empowerment: developing “Thus a long way and no extra” Supportive constructions. A Case from India (pages 194–207): Saraswati Raju
Chapter 15 Feminist Geographies of the “City”: a number of Voices, a number of Meanings (pages 211–227): Valerie Preston and Ebru Ustundag
Chapter sixteen areas of swap: Gender, details know-how, and New Geographies of Mobility and Fixity within the Early Twentiethcentury info economic climate (pages 228–241): Kate Boyer
Chapter 17 Gender and town: the several Formations of Belonging (pages 242–256): Tovi Fenster
Chapter 18 city area in Plural: Elastic, Tamed, Suppressed (pages 257–270): Hille Koskela
Chapter 19 Daycare providers Provision for operating ladies in Japan (pages 271–290): Kamiya Hiroo
Chapter 20 Organizing from the Margins: Grappling with “Empowerment” in India and South Africa (pages 291–304): Richa Nagar and Amanda Lock Swarr
Chapter 21 relocating past “Gender and Gis” to a Feminist viewpoint on details applied sciences: The impression of Welfare Reform on Women's it wishes (pages 305–321): Melissa R. Gilbert and Michele Masucci
Chapter 22 girls outside: Destabilizing the Public/Private Dichotomy (pages 322–333): Phil Hubbard
Chapter 23 Situating our bodies (pages 337–349): Robyn Longhurst
Chapter 24 our bodies, nation self-discipline, and the functionality of Gender in a South African Women's felony (pages 350–362): Teresa Dirsuweit
Chapter 25 Hiv/Aids Interventions and the Politics of the African Woman's physique (pages 363–378): Kawango Agot
Chapter 26 British Pakistani Muslim ladies: Marking the physique, Marking the country (pages 379–397): Robina Mohammad
Chapter 27 Transversal Circuits: Transnational Sexualities and Trinidad (pages 398–416): Jasbir Kaur Puar
Chapter 28 hearing the Landscapes of Mama Tingo: From the “Woman query” in Sustainable improvement to Feminist Political Ecology in Zambrana?chacuey, Dominican Republic (pages 419–433): Dianne Rocheleau
Chapter 29 Gender kinfolk past Farm Fences: Reframing the Spatial Context of neighborhood woodland Livelihoods (pages 434–444): Anoja Wickramasinghe
Chapter 30 the hot Species of Capitalism: An Ecofeminist touch upon Animal Biotechnology (pages 445–457): Jody Emel and Julie Urbanik
Chapter 31 Siren Songs: Gendered Discourses of shock for Sea Creatures (pages 458–485): Jennifer Wolch and Jin Zhang
Chapter 32 Geographic info and Women's Empowerment: A Breast melanoma instance (pages 486–495): Sara McLafferty
Chapter 33 acting a “Global experience of Place”: Women's activities for Environmental Justice (pages 496–515): Giovanna Di Chiro
Chapter 34 Feminist Political Geographies (pages 519–533): Eleonore Kofman
Chapter 35 Gender, Race, and Nationalism: American id and financial Imperialism on the flip of the 20 th Century (pages 534–549): Mona Domosh
Chapter 36 Virility and Violation within the US “War on Terrorism” (pages 550–564): Matthew G. Hannah
Chapter 37 Feminist Geopolitics and September eleven (pages 565–577): Jennifer Hyndman
Chapter 38 Love on the market: advertising homosexual Male P/Leisure area in modern Cape city, South Africa (pages 578–589): Glen S. Elder
Chapter 39 Women's Struggles for Sustainable Peace in Postconflict Peru: A Feminist research of Violence and alter (pages 590–606): Maureen Hays?Mitchell

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Women, knowledge and reality: Explorations in feminist by Ann Garry, Marilyn Pearsall

By Ann Garry, Marilyn Pearsall

This moment variation of Women, wisdom, and Reality keeps to show the ways that feminist philosophers improve and problem philosophy. Essays through twenty-five feminist philosophers, seventeen of them new to the second one variation, handle primary concerns in philosophical and feminist equipment, metaphysics, epistemology, and the philosophies of technological know-how, language, faith and mind/body. This moment version expands the views of ladies of colour, of postmodernism and French feminism, and specializes in the newest controversies in feminist thought and philosophy.

The chapters are geared up through conventional fields of philosophy, and contain introductions which distinction the guidelines of feminist thinkers with conventional philosophers. The gathered essays illustrate either the intensity and breadth of feminist reviews and the variety of latest feminist theoretical views.

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Liberalism and Prostitution (Oxford Political Philosophy) by Peter de Marneffe

By Peter de Marneffe

Civil libertarians signify prostitution as a "victimless crime," and argue that it must be legalized. Feminist critics counter that prostitution isn't victimless, because it harms the folks who do it. Civil libertarians reply that the majority ladies freely decide to do that paintings, and that it truly is paternalistic for the govt. to restrict a person's liberty for her personal reliable. during this publication Peter de Marneffe argues that even though so much prostitution is voluntary, paternalistic prostitution legislation in a few shape are still morally justifiable. If prostitution is often destructive within the means that feminist critics continue, then this argument for prostitution legislation isn't objectionably moralistic and a few prostitution legislation violate no one's rights. Paternalistic prostitution legislation in a few shape are accordingly in step with the basic ideas of latest liberalism.

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Haruko's world: a Japanese farm woman and her community by Gail Lee Bernstein

By Gail Lee Bernstein

In Japan as within the usa, family members farming is at the wane, more and more rejected through the more youthful iteration in want of extra promising fiscal ambitions and extra refined comforts. but for hundreds of years prior, the village and the kinfolk farm have constituted the area of the majority of jap girls, as of eastern males. The dramatic fiscal and demographic advancements of the earlier twenty years have orced large alterations within the lives of eastern farm girls, lots of hwom were left almost in command of their family members farms.This booklet is a research of jap farm women’s lives within the current period: its relevant determine is 42-year-old Haruko, a posh, shiny girl who either exemplifies and makes a mockery of the stereotype of eastern ladies. via Haruko we examine the paintings regimen, relatives relationships, and social lifetime of the ladies who're the mainstay of eastern agriculture. different ladies from Haruko’s village additionally determine within the tale, and the author’s observations of them, dependent principally on a six-month stick with Haruko and her relations in 1974-75, are supplemented with info from questionnaires and private interviews.An epilogue recounts the author’s go back to Haruko’s village in 1982 and describes the alterations that experience happened given that 1975 within the lives of Haruko’s relations and different village ladies. The publication is illustrated with pictures.

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Gender and Rurality (Routledge International Studies of by Lia Bryant

By Lia Bryant

The examine of gender in rural areas continues to be in its infancy. so far, there was little exploration of the structure of the numerous and differing ways in which gender is constituted in rural settings. This ebook will position the query of gender, rurality and distinction at its middle. The authors learn theoretical buildings of gender and discover the connection among those and rural areas. whereas there were broad debates within the feminist literature approximately gender and the intersection of a number of social different types, rural feminist social scientists have not begun to theorize what gender capability in a rural context and the way gender blurs and intersects with different social different types equivalent to sexuality, ethnicity, classification and (dis)ability. This e-book will use empirical examples from a number study tasks undertaken by way of the authors in addition to illustrations from paintings within the Australasia zone, Europe, and the U.S. to discover gender and rurality and their relation to sexuality, ethnicity, type and (dis)ability.

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Progressives, Patterns, Pedagogy: A corpus-driven approach by Ute Römer

By Ute Römer

This ebook provides a large-scale corpus-driven examine of progressives in 'real' English and 'school' English, combining an research of normal linguistic curiosity with a pedagogically influenced one. a scientific comparative research of greater than 10,000 innovative kinds taken from the most important current corpora of spoken British English and from a small corpus of EFL textbook texts highlights a number of variations among genuine language use and textbook language in regards to the distribution of progressives, their most well-liked contexts, favoured services, and common lexical-grammatical styles. at the foundation of those ameliorations, a couple of pedagogical implications are derived, the combination of which then results in a primary draft of an cutting edge thought of training progressives - an idea which responds to 3 key standards in pedagogical description: typicality, authenticity, and communicative software. The research additionally demonstrates that many present money owed of the revolutionary are beside the point in numerous respects and that now not sufficient awareness is being paid to lexical-grammatical relations.! Winner of the "Wissenschaftspreis Hannover 2006" for notable learn monographs !

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