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Feminist Economics
ineteconomics.orgFeminist Futures of Work
aup.nl
Many mothers look for part-time and flexible work so that they can manage all of this extra unpaid work, but only 10 per cent of jobs are advertised as part-time, with just 1 in 4 jobs specifying any type of flexible working,9 so many women are forced to work in jobs that are well below their skill level. On top of this, part-time work is paid at a
... See moreJoeli Brearley • The Motherhood Penalty: How to stop motherhood being the kiss of death for your career
From the outset of second-wave feminist activism in the 1960s, the three main branches of feminism were liberal, materialist, and radical. Liberal feminism worked incrementally to extend all the rights and freedoms of a liberal society to women. It was popular with broader liberal society “on the ground” and successfully reshaped the landscape of s
... See moreHelen Pluckrose • Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity—and Why This Harms Everybody

Feminist Analysis of Social and Solidarity Economy Practices: Views from Latin America and India (Brief 2 of 3)
LinkFeminism is a half-finished revolution. We have been really quite successful when it comes to giving women access to domains that have previously been jealously guarded (often through legal structures) as exclusively male. We have proven that a woman can be “as good as a man” in any number of fields.
But we have progressed very little when it comes
... See moreWhy hasn’t the women’s movement posed the question of freeing the university, not simply in terms of what subjects should be studied, but also in terms of eliminating the financial cost of studying?