Written by leading women's movement scholars, this book is the
first to systematically apply the idea of social movement abeyance
to differing national and international contexts. Its starting
point is the idea that the women's movement is over, an idea
promoted in the media and encouraged by scholarship that regards
disruptive action as a defining element of social movements. It
goes on to compare the trajectories over the past 40 years of
women's movements in Australia, Canada, Japan, Korea, New Zealand,
the United Kingdom and the United States. Finally, it looks at the
extension of feminist activism into supranational and subnational
institutions-the global and the local-and into cyberspace.
Comparing these diverse sites of political and social action
illuminates some of the major opportunities and constraints that
have impacted upon women's movements. It advances our understanding
of the lifecycles of social movements by examining the differing
ways in which women's movements operate and sustain themselves over
time and space, ways that often differ from those of male-led
movements. The book also engages with the question of whether there
is an on-going women's movement-with sufficient continuity to
warrant description as such-by presenting the voices of young
activists East and West.
Filling an important gap in social movement research, this book
will be of interest to sociologists, political scientists and
gender studies scholars and researchers.
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