Socializing care: feminist ethics and public issues
In: Feminist constructions
In: Feminist constructions
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 47-68
ISSN: 1475-6765
Abstract. Based on data from Denmark from the end of the 1970s and 1980s the paper analyzes the development of feminist attitudes during a period characterized, on the one hand, by a high, and still growing, integration of women into the labour market and political life, and on the other, by an organizational decline of the women's movement and a decline in the politicization of women's issues. At the end of the 1970s, feminist attitudes, especially among women, were unidimensionally structured and closely related to other political factors. The most feminist were the young, the well‐educated, the politically interested, and left‐wing women. At the end of the 1980s, feminist attitudes were at the same level as ten years before, but different dimensions had emerged, a social and political dispersion of feminist attitudes had taken place, and feminism no longer influenced political behaviour. In many respects, the experience of the United States in the 1970s was reversed in Denmark in the 1980s.
In: Race and Gender in Science Series
Intro -- Cover Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction Science and Inequality: Controversial Issues -- Controversial Issues -- Do Sciences and their Philosophies have a "Political Unconscious"? -- Which Philosophies of Science are Adequate for a World of Sciences? -- Nature and Culture -- The New Organization of Scientific Inquiry -- Scientific Accountability and Responsibility: from Science as Representation to Science as Practice -- Some Terminological Challenges -- The Importance of Controversy about Science and Society -- Part 1: The Social World of Scientific Research -- 1: Thinking about Race and Science -- Is Science Racist? -- Defenses of Racist Scientific Practices -- Natural Racial Types? -- The Racist Misuse and abuse of sciences and their applications and technologies -- Racist Social Structures in the Sciences -- A World of Sciences: Race, Culture, and Empire -- Conclusion: The Radical Role of Antiracist Resistance -- 2: Seeing Ourselves as Others See Us: Postcolonial Science Studies -- "Would the Gift the Genie Give Us …" -- Are the Natural Sciences Multicultural? -- Does Modern Science have Non-Western Origins? -- Could there be Other Culturally Distinctive Sciences that Work? -- Is Modern Science Culturally "Western"? -- Other Modern Sciences? -- 3: With Both Eyes Open: A World of Sciences -- One Planet, Many Sciences? -- Projects Starting in the Global South -- Integrate Other Sciences into Western Sciences -- Delinking -- Integrate Northern Sciences into Other Sciences -- Southern Models for Northern Sciences -- Projects Starting in the North -- 4: Northern Feminist Science Studies: New Challenges and Opportunities -- Feminist Science and Technology Studies in the Global North -- Surviving Discriminatory Social Structures.
In: European journal of political research: official journal of the European Consortium for Political Research, Band 27, Heft 1, S. 47-68
ISSN: 0304-4130
Based on data from Denmark from the end of the 1970s and 1980s the paper analyses the development of feminist attitudes during a period characterized, on the one hand, by a high, and still growing, integration of women into the labour market and political life, and on the other, by an organizational decline of the women's movement and a decline in the politicization of women's issues. At the end of the 1970s, feminist attitudes, especially among women, were unidimensionally structured and closely related to other political factors. The most feminist were the young, the well-educated, the politically interested, and left-wing women. At the end of the 1980s, feminist attitudes were at the same level as ten years before, but different dimensions had emerged, a social and political dispersion of feminist attitudes had taken place, and feminism no longer influenced political behaviour. In many respects, the experience of the United States in the 1970s was reversed in Denmark in the 1980s. (European Journal of Political Research / AuD)
World Affairs Online
In: Gender issues in education
In: 2 American Philosophical Association Newsletters, Newsletter on Philosophy and Law 161 (2002)
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In: Cultural critique, Heft 14, S. 15-33
ISSN: 0882-4371
In: Cultural Critique, Heft 14, S. 15
In: St. Louis University Public Law Review, Band 15, Heft 2
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ABSTRACT In this paper I analyze Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and her TED Talk based off her book, "We Should All be Feminists." Adichie is a Nigerian woman who has firsthand experience with feminist issues of inequality and she serves as a speaker and activist for issues of feminism and beyond. She is a renowned author, activist, academic, and a feminist. In hearing of her personal experiences regarding inequality, I realized I am able to identify parallels between her experiences and the inequalities which I have faced despite our vastly different origin stories. The importance of her work as a feminist is emphasized in her rhetorical techniques, such as using personal narratives and public vocabulary to bring connection and a sense of equality to her audience. Adichie urges society to modify their actions in order to promote and normalize feminism in a positive light.
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In: Feminist issues
In: New directions in philosophy and cognitive science
Acknowledgements -- List of contributors -- Introduction / Robyn Bluhm, Anne Jaap Jacobson, and Heidi Maibom -- The politics of pictured reality : locating the object from nowhere in fMRI / Letitia Meynell -- What, if anything, can neuroscience tell us about gender differences? / Ginger Hoffman -- In a different voice? / Heidi Maibom -- The role of fetal testosterone in the development of "the essential difference" between the sexes : some essential issues / Giordana Grossi and Cordelia Fine -- Hardwired for sexism? : approaches to sex/gender in neuroscience / Rebecca M. Jordan-Young and Raffaella I. Rumiati -- Re-queering the brain / Anelis Kaiser and Isabelle Dussauge -- Situated neuroscience : exploring biologies of diversity / Gillian Einstein -- Cosmopolitics and the brain : the co-becoming of practices in feminism and neuroscience / Deboleena Roy -- Linking neuroscience, medicine, gender and society through controversy and conflict analysis : a "dissensus framework" for feminist/queer brain science studies / Cynthia Kraus -- Seeing as a social phenomenon : feminist theory and the cognitive sciences / Anne Jaap Jacobson -- Beyond neurosexism : is it possible to defend the female brain? / Robyn Bluhm --- Bibliography -- Index
In: "Science and Arts/Studies and Research" issued by Helwan University - ISSN 1110-1369, 2019
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Working paper