Results for 'Women foreign workers History'

998 found
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  1.  9
    Ecowomanism at the Panamá Canal: black women, labor, and environmental ethics.Sofía Betancourt - 2022 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    In Ecowomanism at the Panamá Canal: Black Women, Labor, and Environmental Ethics, Sofía Betancourt constructs environmental ethics at the intersection of the global North and global South. Betancourt explores transnational environmental justice through the lived experience of women from the African Diaspora who migrated to Panamá to work on the Canal.
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  2.  29
    Black Magic Women: On the Purported Use of Sorcery by Female Foreign Domestic Workers in Singapore.Audrey Verma - 2011 - In Helen Vella Bonavita (ed.), Negotiating Identities : Constructed Selves and Others. Rodopi. pp. 77--25.
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  3.  18
    Negotiating Citizenship: The Case of Foreign Domestic Workers in Canada.Abigail B. Bakan & Daiva Stasiulis - 1997 - Feminist Review 57 (1):112-139.
    This paper argues that most conceptualizations of citizenship limit the purview of the discourse to static categories. ‘Citizenship’ is commonly seen as an ideal type, presuming a largely legal relationship between an inidividual and a single nation-state – more precisely only one type of nation-state, the advanced capitalist post-war model. Alternatively, we suggest a re-conceptualization of citizenship as a negotiated relationship, one which is subject therefore to change, and acted upon collectively within social, political and economic relations of conflict. This (...)
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  4.  8
    Fighting their War during a “Foreign” War: Women anti-Fascist/Communist Activism during World War II in Romania.Ştefan Bosomitu - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:229-258.
    The article discusses this intricate issue of women’s anti-Fascist/communist activism during World War II in Romania. I am particularly interested in the relationship that developed between the Romanian Communist Party and the women who joined the movement in the complicated context of World War II. The article is attempting to assess whether women’s increased involvement in the communist organization was due to the previous and continuous politics of the RCP, or it was a mere consequence of unprecedented (...)
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  5.  10
    Do Czech Women Need ‘Gender’?: A Conceptual History of ‘Gender’ in Czechia.Alexandria Wilson-McDonald - 2023 - Feminist Review 134 (1):21-37.
    In recent years, there has been a growing anti-feminist, conservative movement across many parts of the world known as the anti-gender movement. This movement has been especially strong in Central Eastern Europe, where anti-gender actors have framed ‘gender’ as a static, foreign concept imported from ‘the West’ and destructive to ‘traditional’ societies. Utilising a postcolonial feminist approach, I examine the concept of ‘gender’ in Czechia, drawing attention to the role played by Czech academics, activists and policymakers in negotiating the (...)
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  6.  19
    Feminist Readings of Early Modern Culture: Emerging Subjects.Frederick G. L. Huetwell Professor of English and Women'S. Studies Valerie Traub, Valerie Traub, Callaghan Dympna, M. Lindsay Kaplan & Dympna Callaghan - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    How did the events of the early modern period affect the way gender and the self were represented? This collection of essays attempts to respond to this question by analysing a wide spectrum of cultural concerns - humanism, technology, science, law, anatomy, literacy, domesticity, colonialism, erotic practices, and the theatre - in order to delineate the history of subjectivity and its relationship with the postmodern fragmented subject. The scope of this analysis expands the terrain explored by feminist theory, while (...)
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  7.  14
    Women and the state: Käthe Truhel and the idea of a social bureaucracy.David Kettler - 2007 - History of the Human Sciences 20 (1):19-44.
    Käthe Truhel’s 1934 doctoral dissertation, prepared under the supervision of Karl Mannheim, repays detailed examination for a number of reasons. First, it serves as an important counter-example to commonplace generalities about the alleged incapacity of women social workers of Truhel’s generation, supposedly enmeshed in ideological myths about ‘motherliness’, to reflect on their power relations to a male-dominated society and state. Second, it offers an intrinsically interesting and subtle analysis of the emerging bargaining structure for negotiations between bureaucrats and (...)
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  8.  2
    Women’s Development in China’s Legal Profession Under Gender Stereotypes.Xin Fu & Lina Zhang - forthcoming - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique:1-25.
    In recent years, more and more Chinese women have joined the legal profession and have made remarkable achievements in this field. Gender stereotypes, however, which involve a deep-rooted social concept, have seriously hindered Chinese women’s development in the legal profession and have had a profound and adverse impact on women’s career progression. Based on the statistical data in the public domain as well as the ethnographic data drawn from interviews with legal professionals and informal conversations with lawyers (...)
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  9.  13
    Hired as a Caregiver, Demanded as a Housewife: Becoming a Migrant Domestic Worker in Turkey.Ayşe Akalin - 2007 - European Journal of Women's Studies 14 (3):209-225.
    Women from post-socialist countries started migrating to Turkey in the second half of the 1990s to work in the domestic work sector. Migrant domestics have formed their niche as live-in caregivers, due to the disinclination of the existing local labour power to work in the care sector. Yet, the employer mothers, besides asking their live-in workers to tend their children, often demand that they also do the daily chores in the home, purposely leaving the heavy cleaning to their (...)
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  10.  12
    Chemical ‘canaries’: Munitions workers in the First World War.Patricia Fara - 2023 - History of Science 61 (4):546-560.
    In the early twentieth century, scientific innovations permanently changed international warfare. As chemicals traveled out of laboratories into factories and military locations, war became waged at home as well as overseas. Large numbers of women were employed in munitions factories during the First World War, but their public memories have been overshadowed by men who died on battlefields abroad; they have also been ignored in traditional histories of chemistry that focus on laboratory-based research. Mostly young and poorly educated, but (...)
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  11.  14
    Food provisioning strategies among Latinx farm workers in southwestern Idaho.Lisa Meierotto & Rebecca Som Castellano - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (1):209-223.
    Food provisioning refers to the mental, physical and emotional labor involved in providing food for oneself and one’s family. The labor of food provisioning has been found to be made more difficult by a number of factors, including gender, socioeconomic status, age, and geography. However, little research has been done examining the labor of food provisioning among farm workers, a significantly marginalized population in the United States. In order to examine the food provisioning strategies and struggles of farm (...), we have been conducting pilot research with Latinx agricultural workers in southwestern Idaho. Employing a range of qualitative and quantitative methods, we examine the various strategies that farm workers use to provide food for themselves and their families, including accessing food banks, utilizing food stamps, purchasing groceries and accepting food from friends, family and employers. We consider this from a wider lens of “caring labor”. In addition, we explore food provisioning strategies in the context of economic and demographic changes in Idaho. We observe the ways in which changing crop patterns, in particular the growth the hops industry, relates to a transition in the labor force, especially an increase in women farm workers. We have also observed a shift away from employing migrant farm labor and towards the employment of “settled” Latinx residents from surrounding communities. These changes all influence the labor of food provisioning for rural Idaho Latinx families. (shrink)
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  12.  26
    Maid Or Madam? Filipina Migrant Workers and the Continuity of Domestic Labor.Pei-Chia Lan - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (2):187-208.
    This article examines the complexity of feminized domestic labor in the context of global migration. I view unpaid household labor and paid domestic work not as dichotomous categories but as structural continuities across the public and private spheres. Based on a qualitative study of Filipina migrant domestic workers in Taiwan, I demonstrate how women travel through the maid/madam boundary—housewives in home countries become breadwinners by doing domestic work overseas, and foreign maids turn into foreign brides. While (...)
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  13.  16
    A Very Private Business: Exploring the Demand for Migrant Domestic Workers.Bridget Anderson - 2007 - European Journal of Women's Studies 14 (3):247-264.
    This article considers whether there is a specific demand for migrant domestic workers in the UK, or for workers with particular characteristics that in theory could be met by citizens. It discusses how immigration status can make it easier not only to recruit domestic workers, but also to retain them. `Foreignness' may also make the management of the employment relation easier with employers anxious to discover a coincidence of interest with the worker. Employers are not only looking (...)
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  14.  9
    Polis: a new history of the ancient Greek city-state from the early Iron Age to the end of antiquity.John Ma - 2024 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    The polis, the dominant political form around which ancient Greeks structured their lives and activities, is perhaps their most fundamental creation and enduring legacy. It was a highly successful form of social organization in which Greek culture thrived, including architecture, literature, and philosophy. In this book, ancient historian John Ma offers a new history of the polis from its origins in the Early Iron Age through its eclipse in Late Antiquity. He aims to answer a few big questions about (...)
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  15.  41
    Probit Model for the Women Participate in SMEs Business: A Case Study of Sindh Province.Nadeem Bhatti, Nanik Ram, Fayaz Raza Chandio, Faiz Shaikh & Kamran Shafiq - 2011 - Asian Culture and History 3 (1):73-80.
    The current research explores the women participation in SMEs business by using Probit model. The rapid absorption of women into the labor market has been influenced by several factors. The rapid economic growth was due largely to important growth in the SMEs business, where substantial and proportionally larger increase of female workers has been registered. Among all sectors of the economy, the SMEs have recorded the highest growth rate during the last decade. The increase in the female (...)
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  16.  13
    Enacting a Latinx Decolonial Politic of Belonging: Latinx Community Workers’ Experiences Negotiating Identity and Citizenship in Toronto, Canada.Madelaine Cahuas & Alexandra Arraiz Matute - 2021 - Studies in Social Justice 14 (2):268-286.
    This paper explores how women and non-binary Latinx Community Workers in Toronto, Canada, negotiate their identities, citizenship practices and politics in relation to settler colonialism and decolonization. We demonstrate how LCWs enact a Latinx decolonial politic of belonging, an alternative way of practicing citizenship that strives to simultaneously challenge both Canadian and Latin American settler colonialism. This can be seen when LCWs refuse to be recognized on white settler terms as “proud Canadians,” and create community-based learning initiatives that (...)
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  17.  16
    Future Directiveness within the South African Domestic Workers’ Work-Life Cycle: Considering Exit Strategies.Christel Marais & Christo van Wyk - 2015 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 15 (1):1-14.
    The pervasiveness of domestic employment in the South African context gives rise to the question as to why women not only enter into, but remain in, such an undervalued work situation, and whether they are ultimately able to exit this sector. Contextualising the sectoral engagement of domestic workers as a transitional work-life cycle characterised by impoverishment, limited alternatives, acceptance of the work context, and future directedness, with individual transition through these phases determined by a unique set of circumstances, (...)
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  18.  21
    From Party Leaders to Social Outcasts: Women’s Political Activism during the Establishment of Communist Power in a Polish Industrial Town.Jan A. Burek - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:167-188.
    The author presents the changing role of women and of the attitudes towards them in the PWP and the PSP in a midsize industrial town in Central Poland in the years 1945-1948. During the war, women of the PWP were promoted to the highest positions in the party structures, however, due to the quick reaffirmation of gender roles in the post-1945 period, they were relegated to lower posts. Their political influence was thereafter limited solely to the care sector (...)
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  19.  13
    Herodas' Mimiamb 7: Dancing Dogs and Barking Women.Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides - 2015 - Classical Quarterly 65 (1):153-166.
    Herodas'Mimiamb7 has often attracted scholarly attention on account of its thematic preoccupation with the sexuality of ordinary people, thus offering a realistic and exciting glimpse of everyday life in the eastern Mediterranean of the third centuryb.c.e. In addition, his obscure reference in lines 62–3 to the obsession of women and dogs with dildos has been the focus of long-standing scholarly debate: while most scholars agree that the verses employ a metaphor, possibly of obscene nature, their exact meaning is still (...)
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  20.  5
    Taking out the garbage: Migrant women’s unseen environmental work.Valeria Bonatti - 2018 - European Journal of Women's Studies 25 (1):41-55.
    In recent years, feminist scholars have criticized various European governments for placing the burden of environmentalist practices on women’s unpaid work. While denouncing how environmentalist regimes reinforce gender inequalities, this literature has overlooked migrant domestic workers’ contributions to sustainable practices, such as managing household recyclables and waste. This article addresses the intersection of gender, race and immigration in urban recycling schemes in the city of Naples, Italy, a growing destination for labor migrants and an area with a long (...)
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  21.  6
    Herodas' Mimiamb 7: Dancing Dogs and Barking Women.Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides - 2015 - Classical Quarterly 65 (1):153-166.
    Herodas'Mimiamb7 has often attracted scholarly attention on account of its thematic preoccupation with the sexuality of ordinary people, thus offering a realistic and exciting glimpse of everyday life in the eastern Mediterranean of the third centuryb.c.e. In addition, his obscure reference in lines 62–3 to the obsession of women and dogs with dildos has been the focus of long-standing scholarly debate: while most scholars agree that the verses employ a metaphor, possibly of obscene nature, their exact meaning is still (...)
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  22.  9
    Their Day in the Sun: Women of the Manhattan Project. [REVIEW]George Fleck - 2002 - Isis 93:129-130.
    This book reminds us in yet another context that women's contributions to science can be rendered invisible by “the historical record.” The Manhattan Project, the supersecret midcentury United States research, development, and production enterprise that produced the nuclear bomb, was a massive undertaking, at one time employing 130,000 persons. About 10 percent were women, yet official histories made no mention of female scientists or engineers.Sleuthing by the physicists Ruth Howes and Caroline Herzenberg has documented Manhattan Project contributions by (...)
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  23.  56
    Envisioning a Kinder, gentler world: On recognition and remuneration for care workers.Jennifer A. Parks - 2003 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 24 (6):489-499.
    In this paper, I argue that thestatus of those who take care of persons withdisabilities, and persons with disabilities,are inextricably linked. That is, devaluingthe status of one necessarily devalues that ofthe other. Persons with disabilities and thosewho help care for them must form an alliance toadvance their common interests. This alliancecan gain insight and inspiration from feministthought insofar as caretaking is literallylinked to problems of the representation ofcaretaking as ``women's work,'' and morephilosophically, by borrowing from the toolboxof feminist social, (...)
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  24.  15
    Rhetoric and Ritual: Neo-Protestant Women and Gender Equality in Communist Romania.Iemima Ploscariu - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:147-166.
    In communist Romania, as in other Central and East European communist countries, women became fellow workers in the building of the new proletariat state. However, there was a discrepancy between state rhetoric and the treatment of women in reality. Though not the most targeted faith group in communist Romania, neo-Protestant women faced, nevertheless, multiple levels of marginalization, due to their sex and to their religion. These women re-appropriated the state’s gender equality rhetoric and, along with (...)
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  25.  17
    American lesbians are not French women: heterosexual French feminism and the Americanisation of lesbianism in the 1970s.Ilana Eloit - 2019 - Feminist Theory 20 (4):381-404.
    This article examines the ways in which 1970s French feminists who participated in the Women’s Liberation Movement (Mouvement de libération des femmes – MLF) wielded the spectre of lesbianism as an American idiosyncrasy to counteract the politicisation of lesbianism in France. It argues that the erasure of lesbian difference from the domain of French feminism was a necessary condition for making ‘woman’ an amenable subject for incorporation into the abstract unity of the French nation, wherein heterosexuality is conceived as (...)
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  26.  94
    Moral Problems of Employing Foreign Workers.Aviva Geva - 1999 - Business Ethics Quarterly 9 (3):381-403.
    The employment of foreign workers is one of the most crucial problems today in the domain of work relations. Absorbing workersfrom abroad poses serious questions concerning the moral obligations of the employers as well as the government authorities in the migrantreceiving country. Unfortunately, the moral dilemmas of foreign labor have been largely neglected by business ethics researchers. This paper develops a conceptual framework based on the multinational corporation (MNC) ethical research to help examine the moral obligations of (...)
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  27.  31
    A Brief History of the Changing Occupations and Demographics of Coleopterists from the 18th Through the 20th Century.Scott A. Elias - 2014 - Journal of the History of Biology 47 (2):1-30.
    Systematic entomology flourished as a branch of Natural History from the 1750s to the end of the nineteenth century. During this interval, the “era of Heroic Entomology,” the majority of workers in the field were dedicated amateurs. This article traces the demographic and occupational shifts in entomology through this 150-year interval and into the early twentieth century. The survey is based on entomologists who studied beetles (Coleoptera), and who named sufficient numbers of species to have their own names (...)
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  28.  14
    A radical history of the world.Neil Faulkner - 2018 - London: Pluto Press. Edited by Neil Faulkner.
    Offers a historical study of the world that contends that history is continually created and recreated by conscious, collective human action. Faulkner argues that the struggles of the common people--slaves, serfs, handloom weavers, mine workers, women fighting oppression, black people fighting racism, colonized people fighting imperialism--these struggles, occasionally fusing into mass revolutionary upsurges, drive the historical process. He states that this is an approach to history that emphasizes agency, contingency, and the existence of alternatives; an approach (...)
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  29.  33
    Top-Down Knowledge Hiding in Organizations: An Empirical Study of the Consequences of Supervisor Knowledge Hiding Among Local and Foreign Workers in the Middle East.Ghulam Ali Arain, Zeeshan Ahmed Bhatti, Naeem Ashraf & Yu-Hui Fang - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 164 (3):611-625.
    This study adds to the growing research exploring the consequences of knowledge hiding in organizations. Drawing from the social exchange theory and the norm of reciprocity, this paper examines the direct and indirect—via distrust in supervisor—relationships between supervisor knowledge hiding and supervisee organizational citizenship behavior directed at the supervisor in the context of the Middle East. Using a supervisor–supervisee dyadic design, two-source data were obtained from 317 employees of 41 Saudi firms. The findings suggest that supervisees’ distrust in their supervisors (...)
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  30.  3
    Dilemmas of organizing women office workers.Joan Keller Burton - 1987 - Gender and Society 1 (4):432-446.
    This article analyzes the conditions that facilitate or hinder office-worker activism. Participant observations in Baltimore Working Women, a local affiliate of 9 to 5, and interviews with 72 members and nonmembers revealed the dilemmas of organizing women office workers. Early joiners recruited themselves and then brought in friends for whom the costs of activism were greater. Job security, supportive bosses, and experience in protesting inequities eased the difficulties associated with activism, and commitment to working women's issues (...)
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  31.  28
    The elusive sovereign: New intellectual and social histories of capitalism.Jeffrey Sklansky - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (1):233-248.
    Intellectual history in the United States has long borne a peculiarly close kinship to social history. The twin fields rose together a century ago in a filial revolt against the cloistered, conservative study of political institutions. Sharing a progressive interest in social thought and social reform, they joined in the self-styled “social and intellectual history” of the interwar decades. After mid-century, however, they moved in divergent directions. Many social historians adopted the quantitative methods of the social sciences, (...)
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  32.  4
    Gender Image of Japan in Russia and the USSR: From the Country of Women to the Country of Samurai.A. N. Meshcheryakov - 2018 - Russian Journal of Philosophical Sciences 8:67-89.
    The word “samurai” firmly rooted in the modern Russian language, along with Fujiyama, geisha and sakura. Though obviously this was not always the case. This article traces the initial process of perceiving the concept of samurai in pre-revolutionary Russia and the Soviet Union: from the 1890s, from the first military victories of rapidly modernizing Japan, to the RussoJapanese War and further to the beginning of the Second World War. Initially endowed with features of “childishness” or “femininity,” gentleness and grace, the (...)
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  33.  4
    On the History of the Notion of Freedom.Lino Veljak - 2021 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 41 (1):5-18.
    The notion of freedom was in ancient philosophy formed in the sense of the privileges belonging to adult free citizens, and thus foreigners, minors, women, and slaves were deprived of the possibility of freedom. This definition of freedom was also adopted by Roman law, unlike Stoic philosophy and the New Testament Christianity, where freedom was extended to belong to all human beings. In comparison, the Stoics condemn slavery, while Christianity eschatologises freedom. The Middle Ages built on such a concept (...)
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  34.  12
    Zahra Meghani Women Migrant Workers: Ethical, Political and Legal Problems: Routledge, New York, 2016, 269 pp, price £90 , ISBN 9780415534079.Gabriela Marti - 2016 - Feminist Legal Studies 24 (2):233-237.
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  35.  7
    Mutual Aid: The WorkersHistory of Science.Laura Stark - 2023 - Isis 114 (4):841-849.
    Since around 2010, a workershistory of science has emerged as a distinct set of research questions and professional practices. More than a consolidation of prior concepts, the workershistory of science attends to resource distribution both in sites of science in the past and in present-day historians’ sites of training and labor—the university, the library, the research organization, the professional meeting, and more. To understand the timing and trajectory of the workershistory of (...)
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  36.  16
    Nurses, nannies and caring work: importation, visibility and marketability.Barbara L. Brush & Rukmini Vasupuram - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (3):181-185.
    This paper examines nurses’ international migration within the broader context of female migration, particularly against more studied groups of women who have migrated for employment in care‐giving roles. We analyze the similarities and differences between skilled professional female migrants (nurses) and domestic workers (nannies and in‐home caretakers) and how societal expectations, meanings, and values of care and ‘women's work’, together with myriad social, cultural, economic and political processes, construct the female migrant care‐giver experience. We argue that, as (...)
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  37.  59
    Women in the History of Political Thought: Ancient Greece to Machiavelli.Arlene Saxonhouse - 1985 - Praeger.
    As one reads the classic works of political philosophy one is limited to books written by male authors. When reading interpretations of these authors it seems that the male philosophers were only concerned with the male citizen. Arlene Saxonhouse argues that these classic authors, from Plato to Machiavelli, while they praised the world of male public action, also recognized that the public world was not the totality of human existence. These authors, Saxonhouse says, saw that a private sphere which included (...)
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  38. Women in the History of Analytic Philosophy.Jeanne Peijnenburg & Sander Verhaegh (eds.) - 2022 - Cham: Springer.
    This book contains a selection of papers from the workshop *Women in the History of Analytic Philosophy* held in October 2019 in Tilburg, the Netherlands. It is the first volume devoted to the role of women in early analytic philosophy. It discusses the ideas of ten female philosophers and covers a period of over a hundred years, beginning with the contribution to the Significs Movement by Victoria, Lady Welby in the second half of the nineteenth century, and (...)
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  39.  15
    Women and comedy: history, theory, practice.Peter Dickinson, Anne Higgins, St Pierre, Paul Matthew, Diana Solomon & Sean Zwagerman (eds.) - 2013 - Lanham, Maryland: Co-published with The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group.
    Women and Comedy: History, Theory, Practice brings together leading researchers from Canada, the United States, and Europe in an interdisciplinary collection of essays to chart the future of critical inquiry in gender and comedy studies.
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  40.  29
    Women in the History of Philosophy of Science: What We Do and Do Not Know.Hanne Andersen - 2013 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 3 (1):136-139.
  41.  13
    Enlightened Women in the History of Science.Jacqueline Broad - 2006 - Metascience 15 (2):303-306.
  42.  11
    “Trafficking in women” as migration history: gendered mobility between France and Cuba (early twentieth century).Elisa Camiscioli - 2020 - Clio 51:97-117.
    En se concentrant sur la route transatlantique entre la France et Cuba, cet article explore les débats du début du xxe siècle sur la « traite des femmes » à travers les lunettes de l’histoire des migrations. Diverses sources attestent de la prédominance des prostituées, des proxénètes et des trafiquants français dans l’industrie du sexe à Cuba. La question de savoir si les Françaises étaient des migrantes entreprenantes ou des victimes de la traite reste cependant ouverte pour les contemporains. L’article (...)
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  43.  9
    Theorising violence in mobility: A case of Nepali women migrant workers.Barbara Grossman-Thompson - 2023 - Feminist Theory 24 (2):227-242.
    In this article, I examine violence as constitutive of mobility for the feminine diasporic subject through an examination of women migrant workers from Nepal. I frame this project with two distinct theoretical approaches to understanding violence. First, I draw upon Catharine MacKinnon's provocative question ‘Are women human?’ to elucidate points of disjuncture between individual women migrants and state policy that dehumanises them. Second, I address some of the gaps in MacKinnon's work by turning to Judith Butler's (...)
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  44.  12
    “Just what needed to be done”:: The political practice of women community workers in low-income neighborhoods.Nancy A. Naples - 1991 - Gender and Society 5 (4):478-494.
    This article offers a reconceptualization of “the political” from the standpoint of women working in and for low-income neighborhoods, with special emphasis on the contradictions between their actions as community workers and their understandings of the political aspects of their work. The author also examines how their gender and race identity influenced their political consciousness and practice. The date are drawn from in-depth interviews with forty-two perdominantly African American and Puerto Rican women from New York City and (...)
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  45.  7
    She-Coronavirus: How cartoonists reflected women health workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.Lucía Sapiña & Martí Domínguez - 2022 - European Journal of Women's Studies 29 (2):282-297.
    Women account for 70% of healthcare workers, so their role has been – and still is – fundamental in addressing and managing the current pandemic event caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus. Far from being an opportunity to highlight the importance of women in the field, the healthcare crisis, together with lockdown policies and care responsibilities, have contributed to increase the gender gap. To study the depiction of women healthcare professionals, this paper analyses 401 cartoons on the (...)
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  46.  4
    Filmed images of women factory workers: work, gender and dignity, variations on a classic trilogy (1962-2011)Figures filmiques d’ouvrières : travail, genre et dignité, variations sur une trilogie classique. [REVIEW]Nicolas Hatzfeld - 2014 - Clio 38.
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  47.  15
    Women, Morality, and History.Linda Nicholson - 1983 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 50.
  48.  10
    Women and the History of Republicanism.Alan Coffee - 2019 - Australasian Philosophical Review 3 (4):443-451.
  49.  5
    Culture, social class, and income control in the lives of women garment workers in bangladesh.Nazli Kibria - 1995 - Gender and Society 9 (3):289-309.
    This article looks at the income-related experiences of women workers in Bangladesh in the export garment industry, the first modern industry in the country to employ large numbers of women. The analysis draws on in-depth interviews with 34 female sewing machine operators at five factories. Despite the traditionally low economic autonomy of Bangladeshi women, the women's ability to control their income was varied, and in fact, a substantial number of the women workers exercised (...)
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  50.  25
    Women in World History.Bonnie G. Smith - 2010 - Clio 32:165-188.
    Jusqu’à une époque récente la recherche occidentale sur l’histoire des femmes s’est presque exclusivement intéressée à l’Europe et aux États-Unis. Ailleurs dans le monde, l’intérêt porté à la condition des femmes était aussi centré sur le niveau local ou national. L’histoire des États-nations a servi de cadre aux innombrables découvertes des chercheurs. Mais aujourd’hui, l’histoire des femmes s’est enrichie d’autres dimensions d’analyse, notamment du concept de genre et d’une ouverture sur le monde. Cette étude trace l’évolution de l’histoire des femmes (...)
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