'Reworking Gender' examines the place of gender & feminist scholarship in contemporary critical organization studies. The authors reposition feminism in a communication-centred model that integrates recent developments in feminist, critical & postmodern organizational studies.
In Remaking Gender and the Family, Sarah Woodland examines the complexities of Chinese-language cinematic remakes, exploring how source texts are reshaped for their new audiences, and focusing on how changes in representations of gender ...
The video "Taking Action: Reworking Gender in School Contexts" was developed to improve preservice teacher education in the area of gender equity. It is intended to initiate discussion and reflection...
London: International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED). Tacoli C and Mabala R. 2010. Exploring mobility and migration in the context of rural-urban linkages: Why gender and generation matter. Environment and Urbanization ...
... and Renee Schwalberg. 2014. “Game Change in Colorado: Widespread Use of Long-Acting Reversible Contraceptives and Rapid Decline in Births Among Young, Low-Income Women.” Perspectives on Reproductive and Sexual Health 46(3): 125–132.
Revisiting Gender Training is concerned with the thinking behind gender education and training rather than with day to day practice. It explores the explicit and implicit assumptions in gender training...
Argues that South Africa’s apartheid system of racial segregation relied on an unexamined but interrelated system of sexed oppression that was at once both rigid and flexible.
In this book, Vida L. Midgelow illustrates the ways in which these contemporary reworkings destroy and recreate their source material, turning ballet from a classical performance to a vital exploration of gender, sexuality and cultural ...
This book offers a ground-breaking analysis of how women's movements have been remaking citizenship in multicultural Europe.
Into the Fire illuminates how disasters can serve as catalysts for new patterns of gender, even in highly masculine spaces.
Envisioning new directions for an inclusive anthropology