Getting in Is Not Enough
English

About The Book

Generations of feminists have linked women's empowerment autonomy and oppression to issues involving work. Most conflated women's economic and political clout with gender equity arguing that increasing women's access to and leadership in the public workplace is crucial to the success of the feminist project. But recent debates about women's continued inability to gain equality in the workplace raise the need for new approaches to teaching about gender and employment. Getting In Is Not Enough responds to the challenge.Drawn from almost two decades of the Feminist Formations journal the essays in this book critically examine assumptions about access and the ways in which women affect and are affected by work in three major spheres: economic social and political. Getting In Is Not Enough focuses on how access-based feminism a term developed by Colette Morrow and Terri Ann Fredrick has both failed and succeeded in achieving equity and justice for women and looks at how transnational feminism has addressed these concerns using a global fundamentally transformative approach. The contributors consider a wide range of issues from an examination of the male/female wage gap that starts when girls are teenagers to policewomen in Persian Gulf countries to Latinas' politics to Aboriginal health care workers to secretarial work and to feminist activism in Cuban hip hop.
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