Feminist Global Political Economies of the Everyday

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Adrienne Roberts
Amanda Chisholm
BAME People
Business Case
care work analysis
Category=JBSF11
Category=KCP
Catherine Eschle
Catia Gregoratti
Dalla Costa
Daniela Tepe-Belfrage
Diane Elson
EPZ Employment
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eva Palomo
Everyday Political Economy
Feminism
Feminist GPE
Feminist International Political Economy
Feminist IPE
feminist perspectives on everyday economics
Gender
gendered labour
Gendered Opportunity Structures
Greater Financial Literacy
High Cost Credit
intersectional inequality
Johnna Montgomerie
Jonathon Louth
Kate Bedford
Kate Hardy
Mary-Ann Stephenson
Melissa S. Fisher
Migrant Domestic
Migrant Domestic Work
neoliberal capitalism
Pay For Performance
Payday Lending
qualitative case studies
Samanthi J. Gunawardana
Saskia Stachowitsch
Scottish Women's Budget Group
Security Contractors
Sex Workers
Social Reproduction
social reproduction theory
Stephanie M. Redden
The Everyday
Transnational Business Feminism
Transnational Call Center
UK Woman's Budget Group
Welfare Institutes
Welfare Reform
Woman's Budget Group
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138570443
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 189 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Apr 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection interrogates the multifaceted ways in which global transformations are constituted by deeply gendered socio-economic practices at the level of the ‘everyday’. It brings feminist insights to bear on the emerging International Political Economy (IPE) debates about ‘the everyday’, showing how gender is key to understanding how political economy is enacted and performed at the local level, by non-elites, and via various cultural practices. Drawing on ‘everyday’ IPE and a longer-standing body of feminist scholarship that documents and theorizes the mutually constitutive nature of, on the one hand, global markets, and on the other, households, families, relations of social reproduction and gendered socio-economic practices, this collection charts the lived realities of people and communities across a wide range of sites and spaces of the global political economy. It considers how globalizing capitalism affects and is in turn affected by Argentine sex workers, Nepalese private security contractors, Canadian call centre workers, Southeast Asian domestic workers, workers and players in British bingo halls, working class households in the UK, and much more. It demonstrates, through detailed empirical research, that a gender lens is crucial for understanding how, and on what terms, individuals and households are becoming ever more enmeshed in capitalist social relations, and how they actively and creatively resist these processes. The chapters originally published as a special issue in Globalizations.

Juanita Elias is Reader in International Political Economy at Warwick University, UK. Her research and teaching interests concern the political economy of Southeast Asia, migration, the gendered political economy of the household and feminist approaches to International Political Economy more broadly. Recent work has appeared in Globalizations, Asian Studies Review, Politics and Gender and International Political Sociology. She is co-editor with Lena Rethel of The everyday political economy of Southeast Asia (2016) and co-editor with Samanthi J. Gunawardana of The global political economy of the household in Asia (2013). Adrienne Roberts is Senior Lecturer in International Politics at the University of Manchester, UK. Her research interests are in the areas of international political economy, feminist political economy, gender and finance, debt and debt-driven development, and the criminalization of poverty. She is author of Gendered States of Punishment and Welfare (Routledge, 2017) and co-editor of The Handbook of International Political Economy of Gender (forthcoming 2017). Recent work has also been published in journals that include Research in Political Economy, Globalizations, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, and International Feminist Journal of Politics.