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Extensive welfare, law, and policy reforms characterized the making
and unmaking of Keynesian states in the 20th century. This
collection highlights the gendered nature of these regulatory
shifts and, specifically, the roles played by women - as reformers,
welfare workers, and welfare recipients - in the historical
development of welfare states. The contributors are leading
feminist socio-legal scholars from a range of disciplines in the
US, Canada, and Israel. Collectively, their analyses of women, law,
and poverty speak to long-standing and ongoing feminist concerns:
the importance of historically informed research, the relevance of
women's agency and resistance to the experience of inequality and
injustice, the specificity of the experience of poor women and poor
mothers, the implications of changes to social policy, and the
possibilities for social change. Such analyses are particularly
timely as the devastation of neo-liberalism becomes increasingly
obvious. The current world crisis of capitalism is a defining
moment for liberal states - a global catastrophe that concomitantly
creates a window of opportunity for critical scholars and activists
to reframe debates about social welfare, work, and equality, and to
reinsert the discourse of social justice into the public
consciousness and political agenda of liberal democracies. (Series:
Onati International Series in Law and Society)
Extensive welfare, law, and policy reforms characterized the making
and unmaking of Keynesian states in the 20th century. This
collection highlights the gendered nature of these regulatory
shifts and, specifically, the roles played by women - as reformers,
welfare workers, and welfare recipients - in the historical
development of welfare states. The contributors are leading
feminist socio-legal scholars from a range of disciplines in the
US, Canada, and Israel. Collectively, their analyses of women, law,
and poverty speak to long-standing and ongoing feminist concerns:
the importance of historically informed research, the relevance of
women's agency and resistance to the experience of inequality and
injustice, the specificity of the experience of poor women and poor
mothers, the implications of changes to social policy, and the
possibilities for social change. Such analyses are particularly
timely as the devastation of neo-liberalism becomes increasingly
obvious. The current world crisis of capitalism is a defining
moment for liberal states - a global catastrophe that concomitantly
creates a window of opportunity for critical scholars and activists
to reframe debates about social welfare, work, and equality, and to
reinsert the discourse of social justice into the public
consciousness and political agenda of liberal democracies. (Series:
Onati International Series in Law and Society)
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