Women, Power and Political Systems

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Brazilian Government
Brazilian Women
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comparative patriarchy studies
Convenience Foods
domestic labour
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family
feminism
feminist
feminist political theory
Free Women
gender and politics
gender roles in institutions
Government Bodies
Hard Day's Night
Hard Day’s Night
Labour Force Sample Survey
labour market inequality
Married Women
Men MPs
Mixed Sex Unit
Natural Birth Control
political power
Private Member Bills
Public Administration
social conditions
social development
social policy analysis
Turkish Women
USA Technology
Vice Versa
wage labour
West Germany
WLM
Woman MP
women empowerment legal strategies
women in government
Women Judges
Women MPs
Women's Domestic Labour
women's issues
Women's Maternal Role
women's movement
women's political activity
women's role
Women's Support Networks
women's traditional gender roles
Women’s Domestic Labour
Women’s Maternal Role
Women’s Support Networks
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138388260
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In their analyses of the role of women in politics, political scientists had tended to neglect the family and the labour market, thus ignoring a crucial aspect of women’s political activity.

Originally published in 1981, this book shows that the family and the labour market are political institutions directly relevant to the distribution of power and to economic and social development. Because the political functions of these two institutions are ignored, political systems are misunderstood with serious consequences for the implementation of policy. The studies in the book, which relate to widely different political systems and which cross disciplinary boundaries, all concentrate on the crucial activities of women. They serve to increase our understanding of the political implications of the family, of the sexual divisions of both domestic and wage labour and of the role of education in these inequalities at the time. They show the fundamental comparability of the problems posed by patriarchy as well as the diversity of their manifestations in different political and economic systems. Further, the studies show an unexpected dependence of male-dominated institutions, such as the military and high technology, on women’s traditional gender roles. Ways of empowering the powerless through law, political activity and employment are also discussed.

By extending the scope of discussion, this book is a valuable contribution to our understanding of politics and of the centrality of women to political structures.