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  1. Paradoxes of Professionalization: Parallel Dilemmas in Women's Organizations in the Americas.Karen W. Tice & Lisa Markowitz - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (6):941-958.
    During the past two decades, opportunities for women's social movement organizations to expand their scope of engagement have often been accompanied by greater vulnerability to donor discipline and scrutiny. Efforts by activists to accommodate the demands for accountability and institutional sustainability by professionalizing their organizations have been instrumental in moving feminist concerns into the political mainstream. However, such institutionalization has frequently contributed to the persistence or creation of social hierarchies within and between women's organizations, as well as to shifts in (...)
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  • “Worse than men”: Gendered mobilization in an urban Brazilian squatter settlement, 1971-91.Kevin Neuhouser - 1995 - Gender and Society 9 (1):38-59.
    Although women's movements have received considerable scholarly attention, the role of women in movements that are not overtly gender based has not. Gender, however, plays a significant role in generic movements. Over a 20-year period, an urban squatter settlement in Brazil experienced five collective campaigns, not one of which was gender conscious, but all of which were shaped by gender. In these collective campaigns, everything from participation to strategies to outcomes was grounded in the gender-based division of labor in the (...)
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  • “The time of chaos was the best”: Feminist mobilization and demobilization in east germany.Myra Marx Ferree - 1994 - Gender and Society 8 (4):597-623.
    The women's movement in East Germany went through three phases—emergence, white-hot mobilization, and demobilization—in rapid succession. These stages are analyzed with regard to the resources, political opportunities, and personal meanings of feminism that activists had available. The postunification crisis of the movement is used to examine issues of collective identity between East and West, and to highlight challenges to dichotomies between public and private, capitalism and socialism posed by the movement.
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