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  1. Embodying Resistance: Politics and the Mobilization of Vulnerability.Moya Lloyd - 2024 - Theory, Culture and Society 41 (1):111-126.
    How are we to understand hunger strikes and episodes of lip-sewing in immigration detention? Are they simply cases of self-destruction or bare life, as is often claimed, or is there scope to view these embodied acts of self-harm as having a political dimension and to see those engaged in them as resistant subjects exercising political agency? To explore these issues, I draw on recent feminist theoretical work on vulnerability. Received wisdom suggests that vulnerability is an impediment to political action. Rejecting (...)
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  • Beyond Bounded Selves and Places: The Relational Making of Vulnerability and Security.Erinn Cunniff Gilson - 2018 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49 (3):229-242.
    ABSTRACTThis essay elaborates how an imbalanced reciprocity between inhabitants of places of relative safety and places of greater precarity results from pursuing security on the basis of a reactive fear of vulnerability. It analyzes a range of features that shape the complex forms that vulnerability takes with a particular focus on how the constitution of places as rhetorically and corporeally secure or not renders different groups of people secure and/or subject to heightened exposure to harm. This analysis suggests that vulnerability (...)
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  • Male Fertility-Related mHealth: Does It Create New Vulnerabilities?Michiel De Proost - 2023 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 16 (2):199-208.
    Male fertility–related mHealth (MFmHealth), including smartphone applications that allow men to test their fertility at home, is getting some attention now and then. In this commentary, I argue that MFmHealth technology has the potential to undermine established norms around male reproduction but cannot be examined using traditional individualist frameworks in bioethics. Instead, theoretical literature on the concept of vulnerability in feminist bioethics allow a theoretical alliance with critical studies of men and masculinities. Proposed benefits like empowerment, shared responsibility, and democratization (...)
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  • Feminist philosophy of law.Patricia Smith - 2010 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Feminist philosophy of law.Leslie Francis - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.