This new study reveals how institutional practices and discourses shape the way men and women are conceived of, and how through this process, gender stereotypes and expectations are created.
Informed by the latest research and trends, these expert authors examine the way in which domestic and global institutions shape and reflect gender interests and the extent to which feminists can challenge gender norms through political institutions.
They examine regional, national and international institutions including the EU, ICC and UN and take a broad view of political institutions to include bureaucracy; federalism; legal structures; parliaments; voting and electoral institutions; and media coverage of womens involvement in such institutions.
Drawing on experiences in the US, UK, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of gender studies, political science and comparative politics.
1. Introduction: The Politics of Womens Interests 2. The Problem with Interests: Making Political Claims for Women 3. Is There Such a Thing as a Political Womens Interest in Britain? 4. Womens Interests and Political Orientations: The Gender Voting Gap in Three Industrialized Settings 5. Advancing Womens Interest in Formal Politics: The Politics of Presence and Proportional Representation in the Antipodes 6. From Womens Interests to Special Interests: Reframing Equality Claims 7. Disparate Fates in Challenging Times: Womens Policy Agencies and Neoliberalism in Aotearoa/New Zealand and British Columbia 8. Gender Inequality and Feminist Activism in Institutions: Challenges of Marginalization and Feminist Fading 9. Womens Interests, Gender Mainstreaming and the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights 10. International Citizenship and Womens Interests 11. Womens Intel4