Intersectionality in Feminist and Queer Movements

Intersectionality in Feminist and Queer Movements

Confronting Privileges

Evans, Elizabeth; Lepinard, Eleonore

Taylor & Francis Ltd

06/2021

312

Mole

Inglês

9781032084404

15 a 20 dias

444

Descrição não disponível.
Confronting Privileges in Feminist and Queer Movements; Section One: Thinking through Differences in Feminist and Queer Movements; 1. Borders, Boundaries and Brokers: The unintended consequences of strategic essentialism in transnational feminist networks; 2. Location Matters: The 2017 Women's Marches as Intersectional Imaginary; 3. Changing Core Business? Institutionalised Feminisms and Intersectionality in Belgium and Germany; 4. Intersectional Complexities in Gender-Based Violence Politics; 5. Organising as Intersectional Feminists in the Global South: Birth and Mode of Action of a Post-2011 Feminist Groups in Morocco; 6. Intersectionality or Unity? Attempts to Address Privilege in the Contemporary Self-Help Movement; Section Two: Intersectionality and Social Movement Organising; 7. Disability and Intersectionality: Patterns of Ableism in the Women's Movement; 8. Difficult Intersections: Nation(alism) and the LGBTIQ Movement in Cyprus; 9. Feminist Whiteness: Resisting Intersectionality in France; 10. Intersectional Praxis from Within and Without: Challenging Whiteness in Quebec's LGBTQ Movement; 11. Paradoxes of Intersectional Practice: Race and Class in the Chicago Anti-Violence Movement; 12. Intersectional Politics on Domestic Workers' Rights: The Cases of Ecuador and Colombia; 13. Queer Muslims, Autonomous Organising and the UK LGBT+ Movement; 14. Generational Conflict and the Politics of Inclusion in Two Feminist Events; Privileges Confronted?.
racial privilege;queer movement;intersectionality;LGB Activist;feminist movement;UK Movement;Queer Spectrums;USA Border;Swedish Gender Equality Policy;Queer Coalitions;MF Group;Afro-Colombian Women;Antiviolence Movement;LGBTQ Activist;LGBTQ Movement;Intersectional Praxis;Anti-violence Movement;LGBTQ Organisation;Public Administration;Queer Muslim;LGB;CEDAW;LGBTIQ Movement;Disabled Women;Transnational Feminist Networks;Women's March;LGBTQ Community;Intersectional Aspects;Prefigurative Politics