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In an increasingly globalized world of collapsing economic borders
and extending formal political and legal equality rights, active
citizenship has the potential to expand as well as deepen. At the
same time, with the rise of neo-liberalism, welfare state
retrenchment, decline of state employment, re-privatization and the
rising gap between rich and poor, the economic, social and
political citizenship rights of certain categories of people are
increasingly curtailed. This book examines the complexity of
citizenship in historical and contemporary contexts. It draws on
empirical research from a range of countries, contexts and
approaches in addressing women and citizenship in a global/local
world and covers a selection of diverse issues, both present and
past, to include immigration, ethnicity, class, nationality,
political and economic participation, institutions and the private
and public spheres. This rich collection informs our understanding
of the pitfalls and possibilities for women in the persistence and
changes within the contours of citizenship.
Bringing together a collection of original essays from top scholars in the US and Asia, this book explores the centrality of gender in the process of economic development in East Asia. Contributors demonstrate the essential parts women have played in the national growth, economic restructuring, and industrialization of East Asian countries, including South Korea, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Thailand. The studies are grounded in ethnography, personal narratives, field observation, and in-depth interviews.
Bringing together a collection of original essays from top scholars in the US and Asia, this book explores the centrality of gender in the process of economic development in East Asia, with fresh and informative perspectives.
The papers in this volume were selected and revised from among
those presented at the conference "Gender and Social
Transformation: Global, Transnational, and Local Realities and
Perspectives", Beijing, China in 2009. Through case studies and
interview data from across the globe we see how intersectionality
and inequality are contextualized shaping women's agencies, gender
relations, identity, the politics of belonging, power structures,
institutional arrangements, and empowerment (self and/or
collective) in local communities and cultures influenced by
transnational and global networks and processes. Those who
experience inequality, the politics of exclusion and social
injustice by virtue of gender, ethnicity and/or class and other
differences are the most vulnerable in the face of new adversities,
including those that occur in response to globalization. Broader
theoretical and methodological contexts for these nation- and
region-specific studies are provided in essays by leading gender
theorists. Divisions of labor, migration, war and peace-building
are among the specific topics addressed in papers from China,
India, Israel, Korea, Germany, Australia, Turkey and the United
States.
This volume examines the ways individuals, families and societies
strive to balance paid and unpaid labor, engage in parenting and
accomplish other care-work, seek education for themselves and their
children and respond to the mass media, sometimes under conditions
of poverty or violence.
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