Introduction, Marilyn Friedman
Part I: Citizenship, Government, and Law
1: The Logic of Masculinist Protection: Reflections on the Current
Security State, Iris Marion Young
2: French Universalism in the Nineties, Joan Wallach Scott
3: Battered Women, Intimidation, and the Law, Sandra Bartky
Part II: Practices of Citizenship in Culture and Civil Society
4: Women's Community Activism and the Rejection of "Politics": Some
Dilemmas of Popular Democratic Movements, Martha Ackelsberg
5: Arenas of Citizenship: Civil Society, State, and the Global
Order, Alison M. Jaggar
6: Multiple Subjectivities: Chicanas and Cultural Citizenship, Aida
Hurtado
7: Care as the Work of Citizens: A Modest Proposal, Joan Tronto
Part III: Grounds of Citizenship in Culture and Civil Society
8: The Kin Contract and Citizenship in the Middle East, Suad
Joseph
9: Citizenship and Faith, Amina Wadud
10: Women's Education: A Global Challenge, Martha C. Nussbaum
Index
Marilyn Friedman is Professor of Philosophy at Washington University and author of Autonomy, Gender, Politics (OUP 2002).
"A noteworthy contribution to the burgeoning scholarship on gender
and citizenship."--Shelley Wilcox, Feminism and Philosophy
"Both a first rate addition to primary research as well as to
critical work in the field. The question of citizenship and gender
in particular will become more relevant and pressing as the EU
expands and questions of gender parity come to the foreground in
the aging developed nations of the West. This is an important
work."--Eduardo Mendieta, SUNY Stony Brook
Ask a Question About this Product More... |