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1

Eyal-Lubling, Roni, and Michal Krumer-Nevo. "Feminist Social Work: Practice and Theory of Practice." Social Work 61, no. 3 (2016): 245–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sw/sww026.

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Abstract Although feminist social work has been practiced in Israel since the 1970s, little has been written about it. This qualitative study aims to fill this gap by documenting and conceptualizing feminist theory of practice and actual practice based on interviews with 12 feminist social workers. Findings reveal that the interviewees perceive feminist practice as significantly different from traditional social work practice based on four analytical principles: (1) gender analysis, (2) awareness of power relations, (3) analysis of welfare services as structures of oppression, and (4) utilizat
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HOSSAIN, ISMAIL, AL-AMIN, and JAHANGIR ALAM. "NGO INTERVENTIONS AND WOMEN DEVELOPMENT IN BANGLADESH: DO FEMINIST THEORIES WORK?" Hong Kong Journal of Social Work 46, no. 01n02 (2012): 13–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0219246212000046.

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This paper reviews the extent to which feminist viewpoints are incorporated in NGO interventions aimed at women's development in Bangladesh by examining major feminist perspectives alongside NGO intervention strategies. Based on fieldwork experiences in four NGOs, it determines that NGOs are not following any specific feminist theory, but rather interventions are influenced by development paradigms engrossed in western feminist perspectives. The paper finds that third world feminism is more pertinent to the socioeconomic context of Bangladesh. However, this perspective is alone insufficient to
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Hoffmann, Frances. "Sexual Harassment in Academia: Feminist Theory and Institutional Practice." Harvard Educational Review 56, no. 2 (1986): 105–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.17763/haer.56.2.y11m78k58t4052x2.

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In recent years many colleges have responded to the problem of sexual harassment of students and workers in various ways that do not address certain structural conditions underlying the problem. Frances Hoffmann provides a feminist critique of the problem of sexual harassment and of the institutional responses to it. She also offers guidelines for formulating policies and procedures that make clear connections between sexual harassment and social/cultural conditions and that empower victims and potential victims.
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Filigrana, Pastora. "Anti-racist Feminism or Barbarism." South Atlantic Quarterly 119, no. 3 (2020): 629–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00382876-8601470.

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In September 2017, feminist assemblies began meeting on the eighth day of each month in multiple cities and towns across Spain to prepare for the feminist strike in the country. That same fall, the trial is held for the “wolf pack,” the gang rape that occurred during the festival of San Fermín in 2016: once again, the woman who was raped is put on trial, and not the rapists. With the slogans, “I believe you” and “Listen, sister, here is your pack,” the call goes viral, filling streets, plazas, and social media. This viral call is repeated in April when the sentence in announced that only conde
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Walter, Uta M., and K. Jean Peterson. "Gendered Differences: Postmodern Feminist Perspectives and Young Women Identified as “Emotionally Disabled”." Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services 83, no. 5 (2002): 596–603. http://dx.doi.org/10.1606/1044-3894.67.

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Little consideration has been given to adolescent girls identified as having emotional disabilities in either the research or clinical literature. Social workers continue to use developmental theories that are based on males, and thus contribute to the persistent silence about the needs of this population. Feminist and postmodern perspectives can serve to highlight how dominant discourses around “gender,” “emotional disabilities,” and “psychological development” influence social work theory and practice with this population. This paper uses feminist and postmodern re-visions of developmental t
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Jordan, Karen, and Emma Tseris. "Locating, understanding and celebrating disability: Revisiting Erikson’s “stages”." Feminism & Psychology 28, no. 3 (2017): 427–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959353517705400.

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The assumption of universal human developmental tasks is central to Erikson’s influential Eight Stages of Man. While grand developmental theories have been strongly critiqued from a feminist perspective, it is necessary for feminists to also consider the implications of Erikson’s theory from a critical disability perspective. Applications of Erikson’s theory have claimed that disabled people experience stagnated development because they are unable to complete the achievements required for full participation in adulthood. However, we argue that the positioning of disabled people as diminished a
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Baines, Donna, Ian Cunningham, Innocentia Kgaphola, and Senzelwe Mthembu. "Nonprofit Care Work as Social Glue: Creating and Sustaining Social Reproduction in the Context of Austerity/Late Neoliberalism." Affilia 35, no. 4 (2020): 449–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886109920906787.

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This article will bring together the social glue concept of social reproduction and a feminist analysis of civil society to the study of nonprofit care work in order to cast analytic light on the dynamics of care work in the nonprofit sector and contribute to theorizing care work, to identify and theorize aspects of nonprofit care work which reproduce and sustain social glue, and to supplement theory on civil society. Drawing on qualitative interviews with nonprofit care workers in South Africa and Scotland, this article argues that care work, in general, and nonprofit care work, more specific
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Brown, Catrina. "Critical Clinical Social Work and the Neoliberal Constraints on Social Justice in Mental Health." Research on Social Work Practice 31, no. 6 (2021): 644–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049731520984531.

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Despite a strong history of social justice–based social work professional education in Canada, there has not been an intentional integration of direct critical clinical mental health practice with social justice–based theory. Progressive social work has tended to view clinical work as focusing on the individual and failing to contribute to social change. In this article, I elaborate upon a critical clinical social work approach influenced by postmodern critique, and feminist-, narrative-, and collaborative-based practice rooted in critical theory. Critical clinical practice disrupts the indivi
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Lane, William A., and Kristie L. Seelman. "The Apparatus of Social Reproduction." Affilia 33, no. 2 (2018): 154–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886109917747614.

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The apparatus of social reproduction describes the process by which knowledge production contributes to oppressive conditions. This article explains and defines this process through the application of a critical theoretical lens informed the Foucauldian concept of apparatus or dispositif and social reproduction as developed by feminist activists and intellectuals. This process has a notable influence on the political economic conditions of transgender women, conditions that include disproportionate reliance on the use of criminalized economies such as sex work. Social workers inadvertently inf
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LOTHERINGTON, ANN THERESE, AUD OBSTFELDER, and SUSAN HALFORD. "No place for old women: a critical inquiry into age in later working life." Ageing and Society 37, no. 6 (2016): 1156–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0144686x16000064.

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ABSTRACTWestern countries currently face pressing demands to transform the labour market participation of older workers, in order to address the pressing economic and social challenges of an ageing population. However, in this article we argue that our understanding of older workers is limited by a dominant discourse that emphasises individuals rather than organisations; and valorises youth as the performative aspiration for all workers, regardless of age. To see things differently, and to see different things, we offer a novel analytical synthesis that combines insights from post-foundational
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Hereth, Jane, and Alida Bouris. "Queering Smart Decarceration: Centering the Experiences of LGBTQ+ Young People to Imagine a World Without Prisons." Affilia 35, no. 3 (2019): 358–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886109919871268.

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Addressing mass incarceration through smart decarceration initiatives is one of the Grand Challenges for Social Work named by the American Academy of Social Work Welfare and Research. The exponential growth of the U.S. prison system is largely due to legislation that targets marginalized communities, including people of color, poor people, people with mental illness, and those living with disabilities, as well as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) people of all ages. In this article, we seek to complicate the current conversation on smart decarceration by arguing that soci
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Swift, Jayne. "Toxic Positivity?" South Atlantic Quarterly 120, no. 3 (2021): 591–608. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00382876-9423071.

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This article examines how, in the public eye, the hooker became happy. Extending Sara Ahmed’s concept of the “happiness duty,” the article explicates how sex positivity has inaugurated “respectability” politics within sex worker social movements. The author argues that sex worker social movements have sought to change public debates about commercial sex, vis-à-vis an antistereotype strategy that reimagined the sex worker as a sex-positive feminist, distinguished less by her critical politics of pleasure and more by the implication that she freely chooses and finds happiness in her work. Emphas
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Cohen, Marcia B. "Perceptions of Power in Client/Worker Relationships." Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services 79, no. 4 (1998): 433–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1606/1044-3894.705.

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Recent literature on empowerment-oriented social work practice raises intriguing questions about the nature of power in client/worker relationships. This qualitative study explores client and worker perceptions of power in their relationships with each other. Individual and focus group interviews were conducted in residential settings serving men and women with histories of homelessness and psychiatric hospitalization. Staff and residents' experiences with helping relationships were probed, with particular attention to characteristics of mutuality, equality, and power. Client and worker prefer
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Belshaku, Sabina. "Role of Social Worker in National Center for Victims of Domestic Violence." European Scientific Journal, ESJ 12, no. 23 (2016): 199. http://dx.doi.org/10.19044/esj.2016.v12n23p199.

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Social worker on shelter should be familiar with the process of domestic violence. This involves the various forms of violence, consequences of violence, and ways of assisting victims of domestic violence. The aim of this study is to determine the overall objective of the role of social workers in national centers for victims of domestic violence. Also, this study aims to contribute to the improvement of services provided by the state for battered women. Through the application of qualitative research method conducted in the center of battered women retained in the estimated service, Kamëz was
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Possick, Chaya. "Women who frequent soup kitchens: A cultural, gender-mainstreaming perspective." Journal of Social Work 19, no. 3 (2018): 397–414. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468017318765993.

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Summary The aim of this qualitative study is to explore the meanings Israeli women who frequent soup assign to this experience. The study is based on participant observation and 16 recorded interviews with women in eight soup kitchens in Israel. The study adopts a gender-mainstreaming approach to food security that privileges the life knowledge of women living in poverty. The grounded theory method was employed in the collection and analysis of the data-field notes and interviews. Findings Four main categories regarding women’s constructions of motivations for frequenting soup kitchens emerged
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Dalton, Bronwen, and Kyungja Jung. "Becoming cosmopolitan women while negotiating structurally limited choices: The case of Korean migrant sex workers in Australia." Organization 26, no. 3 (2018): 355–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1350508418812554.

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International labor mobility holds the promise that one can become a cosmopolitan citizen of the world. But this interpretation of mobility rarely features in research and media focused on Asian women who travel and engage in sex work. In both arenas, the dominant narrative is that migrant sex workers are poor, the victims of sex trafficking, and pose a risk to public health. This narrative is laced with Orientalist overtones of the Asian sex worker as the alluringly exotic ‘other’, passive and particularly vulnerable, and in need of rescue. However, the interviews of 11 Korean women sex worke
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Grittner, Alison, and Kathleen C. Sitter. "The Role of Place in the Lives of Sex Workers: A Sociospatial Analysis of Two International Case Studies." Affilia 35, no. 2 (2019): 274–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0886109919872965.

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This article conceptualizes how place-based analysis can generate innovative understandings of sex work and spatial justice, including ways in which stigma, well-being, and marginality are embodied in sex work places. Focusing on three interconnected dimensions of place—geographic location, material environment, and sociopower structures—this article examines the unexplored realm of place and sex work. Beginning with an analysis of existing sex work literature and knowledge relating to dimensions of place, we explicate the role of feminist ideologies, juridical contexts, and the built environm
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Wilkin, Alice, and Pranee Liamputtong. "The photovoice method: researching the experiences of Aboriginal health workers through photographs." Australian Journal of Primary Health 16, no. 3 (2010): 231. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/py09071.

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This paper discusses the methodological framework and perspectives that were used in a larger study aiming at examining the experience of working life among female Aboriginal health care workers. Currently, the voice of Aboriginal women who work in the Australian health system has not received much attention. In comparison to other occupations and backgrounds, there is virtually no literature on Aboriginal woman health care workers despite 15% of health care and social service industry employees in Australia being Aboriginal. In this study, we selected female participants because of the fact t
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Pack, Margaret. "Revisions to the therapeutic relationship: A qualitative inquiry into sexual abuse therapists’ theories for practice as a mitigating factor in vicarious traumatisation." Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work 21, no. 4 (2009): 73–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol21iss4id263.

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This article reports a qualitative study which explores sexual abuse counsellors’ theories for practice and how they say they develop and use an array of theoretical approaches to support their well-being and clinical effectiveness over time. Half the sample of Accident Compensation Commission (ACC) registered therapists were social workers who subsequently trained in other professions such as counselling and psychotherapy. The findings suggest that social workers who engage with traumatic disclosures from their clients actively evolve strategies and resources that act to buffer the more negat
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Olasik, Marta. "Female Subversion through Sex Work: Transgressive Discourses." Przegląd Socjologii Jakościowej 14, no. 1 (2018): 114–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/1733-8069.14.1.06.

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The main objective of this article is to provide a multi-faceted and spatially-sensitive reflection on sex work. Taking as a point of departure subversive feminist politics on the one hand and the much contingent notion of citizenship on the other, I intend to present various forms of prostitution as potentially positive and empowering modes of sexual and emotional auto-creation. Informed by the leading research of the subject, as well as inspired and educated by Australia-based Dr Elizabeth Smith from La Trobe University in Melbourne, who had researched and presented female sex workers as sel
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21

Baines, Donna, and Ian Cunningham. "‘How could management let this happen?’ Gender, unpaid work and industrial relations in the nonprofit social services sector." Economic and Industrial Democracy 41, no. 2 (2017): 436–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0143831x17715768.

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In order to compete in increasingly tight quasi-markets generated by government cutbacks and contracting-out, management in nonprofit agencies have argued that wages and benefits must be reduced or jobs and services will be cut. These arguments have motivated some of the female-majority workers to join and/or organize unions and undertake strike action. Focusing on two case studies exploring restructuring in the highly gendered nonprofit social services in two liberal welfare states (Scotland and Canada), this article explores shifts in industrial relations at the agency level, as well as work
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Alleman, Ali-Sha, Sharlene Allen Milton, Linda Darrell, and Halaevalu F. Ofahengaue Vakalahi. "Women of Color and Work–Life Balance in an Urban Environment: What Is Reality?" Urban Social Work 2, no. 1 (2018): 80–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/2474-8684.2.1.80.

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Background:Work–life balance is a significant issue for women of color in an urban environment whether one is engaged in academia, traditional work, remote/dispersed work, or entrepreneurial work. As women of color attempt to address the tangible and intangible aspects of the “life” portion associated with the work–life balance discussion, elements such as race, ethnicity, religion, spirituality, and caregiver demands toward primary and extended family are often ignored.Objective:This article expands the work–life balance discussion to include urban women of color.Methods:Uses the lens of a wo
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Méndez, Mariela. "Operación Araña: reflections on how a performative intervention in Buenos Aires’s subway system can help rethink feminist activism." Estudos Históricos (Rio de Janeiro) 33, no. 70 (2020): 280–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s2178-14942020000200004.

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Abstract On July 31, 2018, Buenos Aires’s subway system was overtaken by a public intervention under the name “Operación Araña,” co-organized by Ni Una Menos - a feminist social movement focused on gender violence -, the Campaign for the Right to Legal, Safe, and Free Abortion, unionized metro workers, and more than seventy organizations, with the overall intention of affirming women’s autonomy and calling attention to several social issues with direct impact on their lives. This study weaves a series of reflections on some of the specific features of the Operación Araña intervention that can
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Patel, Vibhuti. "Women’s Studies in Praxis: Dr Neera Desai’s Contribution towards Developmental Work for Rural Women in Udwada, South Gujarat." Indian Journal of Gender Studies 25, no. 2 (2018): 256–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0971521518761451.

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Dr Neera Desai personified combination of both theory and praxis in women’s studies that sees itself as an academic discipline to improve women’s status through knowledge construction, teaching and training, documentation, research, and action. She founded Centre for Rural Development (CRD) in SNDT Women’s University, Mumbai to take the learning of women’s studies to transform women’s reality through feminist activism. CRD began its work among rural women in Udwada village of Paradi Taluka in Valsad District of Gujarat by baseline survey to identify the needs of the community. Economic program
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Keating, Maree. "Changing the subject: putting labour into public relations research." Media International Australia 160, no. 1 (2016): 20–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x16651500.

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In this article, I argue for a public relations research agenda which places new divisions of labour and worker subjectivities at the centre. While communication technology may be facilitating greater work flexibility, research is needed into how work processes interact with broader inequality regimes, producing new discourses and possibilities for resistance among public relations practitioners. I discuss the benefits of sociological frameworks which position work as a central organising process through which power relations are constructed and maintained. I then propose that Bourdieu’s theor
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Ridley, LaVelle. "Imagining Otherly." TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 6, no. 4 (2019): 481–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/23289252-7771653.

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Abstract In this article the author focuses on Mya Taylor's singing performance as Alexandra in the 2015 comedy-drama film Tangerine as a performative index of black trans women's futures. Contextualizing her performance within the larger, dangerous world for most black trans sex workers that the film portrays largely without critique, the author argues that this scene offers Alexandra, and black trans viewers of the film, a brief reprieve from the anxieties of social and state oppression and allows her (and us) to breathe, and within that breath to imagine toward radical futures that resist t
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Goldblatt, Beth, and Shirin M. Rai. "Recognizing the Full Costs of Care? Compensation for Families in South Africa’s Silicosis Class Action." Social & Legal Studies 27, no. 6 (2017): 671–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0964663917739455.

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This article concerns recognition and compensation of the intimate, gendered work of caring by family members for workers who became ill with lung diseases as a result of poor labour conditions in the mines in South Africa. It focuses on a recent decision by a court in South Africa ( Nkala and Others v. Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others, 2016) that took the unusual step of acknowledging this care work and attempting to compensate it indirectly. The article combines insights from political economy and law within a feminist frame to develop an argument about compensation for social
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Munt, Martina Madaula. "Collectivity as a coping strategy: A study of Latin American domestic workers in the commodified care system of Barcelona." Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies 24, no. 1 (2021): 25–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/tvgn2021.1.002.munt.

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Abstract This ethnographic study draws from my research on the three main care practices Latin American domestic workers experience in Barcelona: caring as part of their jobs, caring for their families from afar, and caring for each other. Stemming from grounded theory, I will argue that one of the main pressures they suffer daily is social isolation and loneliness. Starting from a brief analysis of how migrant domestic workers bear the burden of care individually – firstly, as part of their jobs and, secondly, as part of their gender duty when being mothers from afar – this paper will trace a
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Anson, Patrick. "Rebecca West's ‘Seamed Red Hand’." Modernist Cultures 16, no. 2 (2021): 139–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/mod.2021.0326.

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The political commitments of Rebecca West's The Return of the Soldier (1918) have proven hard to define. More subdued in its tone and telos than her volleys against patriarchal capitalism in publications such as The Freewoman and The Clarion, some argue that Return undermines West's socialist-feminist pronouncements, while others contend that the novel engages subtler modes of critique. Deepening and extending the latter vein of scholarship, this essay reveals uncharted lines of connection between West's early fiction and nonfiction by performing a ‘palm reading’ of Return: an examination of t
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Whitney, Shiloh. "Byproductive labor." Philosophy & Social Criticism 44, no. 6 (2017): 637–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0191453717741934.

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My aim in this paper is to introduce a theory of affective labor as byproductive, a concept I develop through analysis of the phenomenology of various affective labor practices in dialog with feminist scholarship, both on gendered and racialized labor, and on affect and emotion. I motivate my theory in the context of literature on affective and emotional labor in philosophy and the social sciences, engaging the post-Marxist literature on affective and immaterial labor and emphasizing feminist critiques. I argue that affective labor is not only the work of producing affects for others to consum
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Febrianti, Rizki, and Luluk Isani Kulup. "PERAN WANITA DALAM NOVEL TENAGA KERJA ISTIMEWA KARYA NAIQUEEN." Buana Bastra 6, no. 1 (2021): 52–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.36456/bastra.vol6.no1.a3600.

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The background of this research is the fact that the study of feminism that can deliver on a trueunderstanding of gender. The studies are often used to understand gender issues are studies in thesocial sciences. Of the various social assessment is emerging theories are then used as the theoriesof gender or sometimes called theories of feminism. In a broad sense is a movement feministwomen to reject everything that is lowered by a culture dominated by men. The object of this studyare excerpts novel that tells the story of Indonesian Workers who work as waiters obliged obeyorders from his master
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Purwanto, Andu, and Sunu Catur Budiyono. "HEGEMONI DALAM NOVEL SEUMPAMA MATAHARI KARYA ARAFAT NUR." Buana Bastra 6, no. 1 (2021): 67–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.36456/bastra.vol6.no1.a3602.

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The background of this research is the fact that the study of feminism that can deliver on a trueunderstanding of gender. The studies are often used to understand gender issues are studies in thesocial sciences. Of the various social assessment is emerging theories are then used as the theoriesof gender or sometimes called theories of feminism. In a broad sense is a movement feministwomen to reject everything that is lowered by a culture dominated by men. The object of this studyare excerpts novel that tells the story of Indonesian Workers who work as waiters obliged obeyorders from his master
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Falchi, Federica. "Democracy and the rights of women in the thinking of Giuseppe Mazzini1." Modern Italy 17, no. 1 (2012): 15–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13532944.2012.640084.

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Addressing Italian workers in his Doveri dell'uomo of 1860, Mazzini unequivocally laid out his thoughts on women's rights. The thinker from Genoa, all the more after his encounters with other political philosophers from different national environments such as Britain and France, saw the principle of equality between men and women as fundamental to his project of constructing first the nation, and second a democratic republic. In his ideas regarding emancipation Mazzini, who spent a good 40 years of his life in exile, was one of a small group of European thinkers who in challenging the establis
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Ubalde, Josep, and Amado Alarcón. "Are all automation-resistant skills rewarded? Linguistic skills in the US labour market." Economic and Labour Relations Review 31, no. 3 (2020): 403–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1035304620903152.

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Skills that are difficult to automate are expected to increase in demand and reward according to skill-biased technological change advocates, who have identified high rewards for cognitive and social skills. However, such broad skill categories involve numerous essential competencies that can be differentially rewarded or go simply unrewarded. Using US data, this article analyses the demand for and payment of linguistic competency, a cross-cutting kind of skill that is basic for both cognitive and social work in the new economy and is one of the human capacities that is most difficult to autom
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Felski, Rita. "Feminist Theory and Social Change." Theory, Culture & Society 6, no. 2 (1989): 219–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/026327689006002003.

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Orme, Joan, Lena Dominelli, and Audrey Mullender. "Working with violent men from a feminist social work perspective." International Social Work 43, no. 1 (2000): 89–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/a010523.

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For two decades feminism has addressed the problem of male violence in inter-personal relationships by working with women. However, men continue to violently abuse women. This article argues that work with men is a legitimate focus for feminist social workers, and male social workers who are prepared to work in pro-feminist ways, and discusses pro-feminist groupwork as a model for bringing about change.
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Alston, Margaret. "Feminist social work theory and practice." Australian Social Work 57, no. 2 (2004): 203–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1447-0748.2004.00139.x.

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Malone, Kareen Ror. "Feminist Social Psychologies: Theory... and Method." Theory & Psychology 8, no. 2 (1998): 279–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0959354398082012.

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Laden, Sonja, and Rita Felski. "Beyond Feminist Aesthetics: Feminist Literature and Social Change." Poetics Today 12, no. 3 (1991): 618. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1772662.

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Smith, A. M. "Neoliberalism, welfare policy, and feminist theories of social justice: Feminist Theory Special Issue: `Feminist Theory and Welfare'." Feminist Theory 9, no. 2 (2008): 131–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464700108090407.

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MARSHALL, BARBARA L. "Feminist theory and critical theory." Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie 25, no. 2 (2008): 208–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1755-618x.1988.tb00103.x.

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Alcoff, Linda. "Justifying Feminist Social Science." Hypatia 2, no. 3 (1987): 107–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1527-2001.1987.tb01344.x.

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In this paper I set out the problem of feminist social science as the need to explain and justify its method of theory choice in relation to both its own theories and those of androcentric social science. In doing this, it needs to avoid both a positivism which denies the impact of values on scientific theory-choice and a radical relativism which undercuts the emancipatory potential of feminist research. From the relevant literature I offer two possible solutions: the Holistic and the Constructivist models of theory-choice. I then rate these models according to what extent they solve the probl
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43

Gross, Emma. "Motherhood in Feminist Theory." Affilia 13, no. 3 (1998): 269–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/088610999801300301.

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44

Farganis, Sondra. "Social Theory and Feminist Theory: The Need for Dialogue." Sociological Inquiry 56, no. 1 (1986): 50–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-682x.1986.tb00075.x.

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45

RICHARDSON, JANICE. "Contemporary Feminist Perspectives on Social Contract Theory." Ratio Juris 20, no. 3 (2007): 402–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9337.2007.00367.x.

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46

Forcey, Linda Rennie, and Margaret Nash. "Rethinking Feminist Theory and Social Work Therapy." Women & Therapy 21, no. 4 (1998): 85–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j015v21n04_06.

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47

Mason, Andrew. "Workers' Unfreedom and Women's Unfreedom: Is There a Significant Analogy?" Political Studies 44, no. 1 (1996): 75–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.1996.tb00757.x.

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The dialogue between Marxists and feminists has not always been fruitful, but even if Marxist theory and feminist theory are irreconcilable there may still be significant analogies between their doctrines. This paper suggests that there is a significant analogy between the nature and undesirability of the unfreedom from which, according to Marxist theory, workers suffer, and the nature and undesirability of the unfreedom from which, according to feminist theories, women suffer. This analogy suggests the possibility of various responses feminist theory might make to the criticism that women are
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48

Adam, Barbara. "Feminist Social Theory Needs Time. Reflections on the Relation between Feminist Thought, Social Theory and Time as an Important Parameter in Social Analysis." Sociological Review 37, no. 3 (1989): 458–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954x.1989.tb00039.x.

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This paper explores the relation between feminist concerns, social theory and the multiple time aspects of social life. It is suggested that while feminist approaches have been located in classical political philosophy, the same imposed classification has not occurred with respect to social theory perspectives. Rather than seeing this as an academic gap that needs filling, it was taken as an opportunity to take note of the wide variety of feminist approaches to methodological and theoretical issues and to relate these to concerns arising from a focus on the time, temporality, and timing of soc
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49

Collins, Lynn H. "Illustrating Feminist Theory." Psychology of Women Quarterly 22, no. 1 (1998): 97–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-6402.1998.tb00144.x.

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Feminist theory holds that many of the pathological behaviors observed in patients result from their position in the social hierarchy. The goals of the demonstration detailed in this article are to show the impact of current gender roles on the psychological well-being of women and men and to generate understanding and discussion of the problems that relative status can create in the therapeutic relationship. This teaching demonstration draws parallels between the Zimbardo (1971) prison experiment and the impact that assignment to low- and high-power roles can have on the psychological health
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50

Bailey, Linda. "Social Workers: Managing." Agenda, no. 33 (1997): 81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4066138.

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