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La question qui m’a été adressée -comment se manifeste ton engagement féministe dans tes recherches et dans tes actions? -, m’interpelle sur trois fronts puisque je suis féministe, que je milite depuis plusieurs années et que je fais partie de la classe privilégiée des universitaires. Étudiante au doctorat en sociologie, je travaille actuellement sur la Marche mondiale des femmes en tant que processus de mobilisation collective sexué (D. Kergoat, 1992). Processus dont je suis partie prenante et au sein duquel j’ai eu l’occasion d’effectuer une immersion particulière au cours de l’année 2000, en participant à titre d’étudiante – stagiaire à l’équipe d’organisation et de coordination au niveau international. Et à toutes ces choses, correspond un même préalable dans mon parcours : l’expérience de l’oppression patriarcale.
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Leading feminist scholar and one of the founders of Standpoint Theory, Sandra Harding brings together the biggest names in the field--Dorothy Smith, Donna Haraway, Patricia Hill Collins, Nancy Hartsock and Hilary Rose--to not only showcase the most influential essays on the topic but to also highlight subsequent interrogations and developments of these approaches from a wide variety of disciplines and intellectual and political positions.
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The past decade has seen a proliferation of writing by feminist economists. Feminist economists are not identified with one particular economic paradigm, yet some common methodological points seem to be emerging. I propose making these starting points more explicit so that they can be examined, critiqued, and built upon. I use the term “social provisioning” to describe this emerging methodology. Its five main components are: incorporation of caring and unpaid labor as fundamental economic activities; use of well-being as a measure of economic success; analysis of economic, political, and social processes and power relations; inclusion of ethical goals and values as an intrinsic part of the analysis; and interrogation of differences by class, race-ethnicity, and other factors. The paper then provides brief illustrations of the use of this methodology in analyses of US welfare reform, gender and development, and feminist ecological economics.