Intersectionality and Beyond : Law, Power and the Politics of Location book cover
1st Edition

Intersectionality and Beyond
Law, Power and the Politics of Location





ISBN 9780415432436
Published October 10, 2008 by Routledge-Cavendish
400 Pages

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Book Description

This collection addresses the present and the future of the concept of intersectionality within socio-legal studies. Intersectionality provides a metaphorical schema for understanding the interaction of different forms of disadvantage, including race, sexuality, and gender. But it also goes further to provide a particular model of how these aspects of social identity and location converge – whether at the level of subjectivity, everyday life, in culture or in the institutional practices of state and other bodies. Including contributions from a range of international scholars, this book interrogates what has become a key organizing concept across a range of disciplines, most particularly law, political theory, and cultural studies.

Table of Contents

Part One: Mapping Intersectionalities; 1. Joanne Conaghan: Intersectionality and the Feminist Project in Law; 2. Leslie McCall: The Complexity of Intersectionality; Part Two: Confronting Law; 3. Toni Williams: Intersectionality Analysis in the Sentencing of Aboriginal Women in Canada: What Difference Does it Make?; 4. Doris Buss: Sexual Violence, Ethnicity, and Intersectionality in International Criminal Law; 5. Suzanne B. Goldberg: Intersectionality in Theory and Practice; 6. Rosemary Hunter and Tracey De Simone: Identifying Disadvantage: Beyond Intersectionality; 7. Emily Grabham: Intersectionality: Traumatic Impressions; Part Three: Power Relations and the State; 8. Eilish Rooney: Transitional Intersections: Gender, Sect, and Class in Northern Ireland; 9. Eunjung Kim: Minority Politics in Korea: Disability, Interraciality, and Gender; 10. Siobhan Mullally: Migrant Women Destabilising Borders: Citizenship Debates in Ireland; Part Four: Alternative Pathways; 11. Iris Marion Young: Structural Injustice and the Politics of Difference; 12. Davina Cooper: Intersectional Travel Through Everyday Utopias: The Difference Sexual and Economic Dynamics Make; 13. Lakshmi Arya: Imagining Alternative Universalisms: Intersectionality and the Limits of Liberal Discourse; 14. Momin Rahman: Theorising Intersectionality: Identities, Equality, and Ontology

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Editor(s)

Biography

Davina Cooper is Professor of Law and Political Theory at the University of Kent, and Director of the AHRC Centre for Law, Gender and Sexuality

Emily Grabham is the Research Fellow at the Centre for Law, Gender and Sexuality, at the University of Kent.

Didi Herman is Professor of Law and Social Change at the University of Kent and Thematic Coordinator at the Centre for Law, Gender and Sexuality

Jane Krishnadas is a lecturer in the law school at the University of Keele.

 

 

Reviews

'This important book examines some of the complexities of intersectionality theory in feminist theory in general and in relation to legal issues in particular. In doing so it both problematises and promotes it as central to contemporary 'glocal' feminist theory and activism.'

Nira Yuval-Davis, Professor in Gender & Ethnic Studies, School of Social Sciences, Media and Cultural Studies, University of East London

 

'After almost twenty years of feminist discussion of gender’s intersection with other categories of identity, a collection like this one is way overdue. By addressing tensions between structural and cultural difference and alternative approaches, the collection poses hard questions and offers fresh, open-ended perspectives. This is an invaluable critical assessment of what has become a foundational idea in feminist studies.'

Rosemary Hennessy, Director, Center for the Study of Women, Gender, and Sexuality, Rice University