Although there are only two sexes, the genetic mechanisms that determine male or female development are bewilderingly diverse throughout the animal kingdom. This applies also to insects who determine their sex by a cascade of genes that ultimately set the switch into a male or female mode. This thesis presents novel insight into the sex determination cascade of four parasitoid wasp species. These species belong to a group of insects that do not have sex chromosomes. Instead, males develop from unfertilized haploid eggs, and females from fertilized diploid eggs. In the sequenced genomes of all four species the sex determination genes were identified and compared, showing that the four sex determination cascades have even more variation that ...