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Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has generally been recognized as corporate pro-social behavior aimed at remediating social issues external to organizations, while political CSR has acknowledged the political nature of such activity beyond social aims. Despite the growth of this literature, there is still little attention given to gender as the starting point for a con- versation on CSR, ethics, and the Global South. Deploying critical insights from feminist work in postcolonial traditions, I outline how MNCs replicate gendered neocolonialist discourses and perpetuate exploitative material dependences between Global North/South through CSR activities. Specifically, I address issues of neocolonial relations, subaltern agency, and ethics in the context of gendered global division of labor through the exemplar of Rana Plaza and its aftermath. In all, I offer new directions for CSR scholarship by attending to the intersections of gender, ethics, and responsibility as they relate to corporate actions in the Global South.
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En parallèle avec les luttes des femmes sur le terrain, un courant théorique du féminisme autochtone se développe depuis la fin des années 90. Celui-ci revisite le narratif de la colonisation et la théorie postcoloniale en y intégrant l’analyse genre/« race ». L’auteure tente d’inscrire cette production intellectuelle au sein du paradigme intersectionnel universitaire et de la rendre accessible à un public francophone qui la connaît souvent moins bien. En replaçant la violence sexuelle et le patriarcat d’État au centre du débat, les féminismes autochtones arrivent à percevoir une dimension politique souvent laissée de côté par les analyses intersectionnelles.
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The article explores two intertwined ideas: that the United States is a settler colonial nation-state and that settler colonialism has been and continues to be a gendered process. The article engages Native feminist theories to excavate the deep connections between settler colonialism and heteropatriarchy, highlighting five central challenges that Native feminist theories pose to gender and women's studies. From problematizing settler colonialism and its intersections to questioning academic participation in Indigenous dispossession, responding to these challenges requires a significant departure from how gender and women's studies is regularly understood and taught. Too often, the consideration of Indigenous peoples remains rooted in understanding colonialism as an historical point in time away from which our society has progressed. Centering settler colonialism within gender and women's studies instead exposes the still-existing structure of settler colonialism and its powerful effects on Indigenous peoples and settlers. Taking as its audience practitioners of both "whitestream" and other feminisms and writing in conversation with a long history of Native feminist theorizing, the article offers critical suggestions for the meaningful engagement of Native feminisms. Overall, it aims to persuade readers that attending to the links between heteropatriarchy and settler colonialism is intellectually and politically imperative for all peoples living within settler colonial contexts.
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S’il existe une question féministe qui mérite approfondissement parce qu’elle est compliquée et recouvre des enjeux fondamentaux pour nos existences, c’est bien celle des imbrications structurelles entre l’oppression fondée sur le sexe et les oppressions fondées sur l’appartenance à une race, ethnie ou culture, regroupées ici sous l’appellation “racisme”. Nouvelles Questions Féministes revient ainsi, dans le présent numéro, sur la thématique amorcée dans le premier volume de cet ensemble de deux numéros consacrés au sexisme et au racisme. En effet, qu’il s’agisse de l’imposition du voile ou de son interdiction, de la prostitution, des mariages non consentis, des violences ou des discriminations sur les lieux de travail, l’oppression sexiste ne s’inscrit ni ne se lit dans le corps abstrait de “la femme” universelle et anhistorique, mais dans celui de femmes particulières et particularisées, dans un contexte social déterminé, caractérisé par d’autres rapports de domination.
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Reviews two books on postcolonial studies on modernity. "Gender, Sexuality, and Colonial Modernities," by Antoinette Burton; "The Erotic Margin: Sexuality and Spatiality in Alteritist Discount," by Irwin Scilick.