1. Introduction: Missing in action? 2. Re-gendering governance in times of austerity: dilemmas of feminist research, theory and politics 3. Affective governmentality – A feminist perspective 4. Mainlining the motherboard: The paradox of gendered academic labour in the university 5. Problematization as performative practice: An analysis of articles on gender and innovation 6. Unsettling neoliberlism? Governmentality, feminist analysis and problematizations of workers’ mental health 7. Complaints, gender and power in governing education 8. Situating agency in the context of the post-political city? 9. Analysing power at play: (re-)doing an analytics of the political in an era of governance 10. Epilogue: A three-dimensional feminist post-structuralist analysis
Christine Hudson is a Professor in Political Science at Umeå University, Sweden. She has researched on a wide number of policy areas including city planning and urban and regional policy particularly from a feminist perspective. She has worked with emotional and visual dimensions in studying women’s citizenship in the city and in relation to feelings of fear and safety. Among her recent publications are "Sharing Fairly? Mobility, Citizenship, and Gender Relations in Two Swedish City-Regions, Journal of Urban Affairs, 2017.
Malin Rönnblom is an Associate Professor in Political Science and a Senior Lecturer in Gender Studies, dividing her time between Karlstad and Umeå Universities, both in Sweden. Her main research interests are related to critical policy studies, rural and urban studies, as well as feminist political theory. Among her recent publications in English are: "Planning the new city – emotional reactions and positions", in Emotions, Space and Society, 2016, with Linda Sandberg, and "Contesting feminist discursive institutionalism – a poststructural alternative" in NORA, 2014, with Carol Bacchi.
Katherine Teghtsoonian is Professor Emerita at the University of Victoria, Canada. Her research has explored neoliberalism and its complex relationships with public and organizational policies in diverse empirical fields. Journals in which her work has been published include Critical Policy Studies, International Journal of Political Science, Politics and Gender, Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and Society and Social Science & Medicine.
This collection offers an exciting feminist challenge to mainstream political science. Drawing on feminist and post-structuralist readings of governance, the authors engage with questions of post-politics, governmentality, agency, embodiment, emotion and affect. In doing so they reshape the terrain of politics, and broaden the spaces and practices under consideration. By offering new conceptual and methodological approaches they demonstrate the value of a feminist poststructuralist political science. Wendy Larner, Provost, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
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