Neo-liberal conservatism dominates the contemporary Australian political landscape. Many Women’s Studies programs across the country have either been closed down or been renamed as gender or sexuality studies, potentially decentring a focus on women. In Australia, Women’s Studies programs were initially established with an agenda that embraced activism and social change both within the academy (as a key site for knowledge generation) and in the larger society (Ryan 1991). The goals of academic feminism reflected the goals of the Women’s Liberation Movement of the 1960s and 1970s (Dickinson 2005; Mulvey 1992). For example, early Second Wave activists such as Marilyn Salzman-Webb (1972) identified that feminist learning is for ‘acting on the ...
The challenges of raising the participation of women as leaders in higher education globally have be...
The challenges of raising the participation of women as leaders in higher education globally have be...
‘What is my story? Like you, I have many’, wrote feminist academic Sara Ahmed (Ahmed, 2010, p. 1). S...
Neo-liberal conservatism dominates the contemporary Australian political landscape. Many Women’s Stu...
Whether or not you agree with the broader aims of the rad ical feminist movement, it has already one...
Women's Studies began in Australia in the early 1970s with the first crossdisciplinary subjects at Q...
In 1983 we are drawing close to the end of the ten years which the United Nations designated the Dec...
In this paper, we reflect upon our experiences and those of our peers as doctoral students and early...
This article presents the stories of two Australian feminist educators, ‘Kath’ and &lsqu...
This thesis traces the economic and socio-political changes in Australia over the final three decad...
An analysis of the major Australian community studies since the sixties, shows that despite the scan...
Feminism is of itself an educational project.When feminist activists in the early 1970s questioned t...
Women are substantially under-represented in the professoriate in Australia with a ratio of one fema...
For over forty years feminist women in Australia and other parts of the world have come together in ...
This is a revised version of a paper presented to the American Educational Research Association conf...
The challenges of raising the participation of women as leaders in higher education globally have be...
The challenges of raising the participation of women as leaders in higher education globally have be...
‘What is my story? Like you, I have many’, wrote feminist academic Sara Ahmed (Ahmed, 2010, p. 1). S...
Neo-liberal conservatism dominates the contemporary Australian political landscape. Many Women’s Stu...
Whether or not you agree with the broader aims of the rad ical feminist movement, it has already one...
Women's Studies began in Australia in the early 1970s with the first crossdisciplinary subjects at Q...
In 1983 we are drawing close to the end of the ten years which the United Nations designated the Dec...
In this paper, we reflect upon our experiences and those of our peers as doctoral students and early...
This article presents the stories of two Australian feminist educators, ‘Kath’ and &lsqu...
This thesis traces the economic and socio-political changes in Australia over the final three decad...
An analysis of the major Australian community studies since the sixties, shows that despite the scan...
Feminism is of itself an educational project.When feminist activists in the early 1970s questioned t...
Women are substantially under-represented in the professoriate in Australia with a ratio of one fema...
For over forty years feminist women in Australia and other parts of the world have come together in ...
This is a revised version of a paper presented to the American Educational Research Association conf...
The challenges of raising the participation of women as leaders in higher education globally have be...
The challenges of raising the participation of women as leaders in higher education globally have be...
‘What is my story? Like you, I have many’, wrote feminist academic Sara Ahmed (Ahmed, 2010, p. 1). S...