Relatively early in the attempts to gender the discipline of International Relations (IR), it was argued by some feminist scholars that it was easier to raise feminist concerns in International Political Economy (IPE) than in IR. However, it has subsequently proved very difficult to articulate these concerns within mainstream IPE, as ‘the neo-realist and neo-liberal frameworks, with their common focus on state-centric issues of co-operation and conflict and their positivist and rationalistic methodologies, do not lend themselves to investigating gendered structures of inequality …’. In contrast, more overlap has been discerned between feminist perspectives and methodologies and the less influential ‘globalist’ (also known as critical/transd...
The extensive significance of feminist and gender research clearly does not need demonstrating to t...
Critical Peace and Conflict Studies (PCS) as a field cares about gender. Yet, feminist work frequent...
In this paper we argue that the gap between economic analysis and the rest of human life needs to be...
It remains the case that, in spite of the consistently high quality and quantity of gender analysis,...
Feminist International Political Economy (IPE), with its focus on the gendered dimensions of social ...
Feminist discourses have changed the vision of the issues and sites of political encounter that are ...
This study deals with the Feminist challenge to the Mainstream International Relations Discipline (I...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article assesses feminist accounts of co-optation and appropriation in gender and development p...
The development of feminist IPE theory has been profoundly influenced by new schools of thought that...
This article offers a distinctive mapping of the feminist literature on globalisation. Part I sets t...
Feminist International Relations (IR) theory is haunted by a radical feminist ghost. From Enloe's su...
This paper advocates a more explicit feminist discussion of female complicity by demonstrating that ...
This article makes the case for feminist IR to build knowledge of international institutions. It eme...
What kind of theoretical or methodological changes are needed to more effectively theorize global po...
The extensive significance of feminist and gender research clearly does not need demonstrating to t...
Critical Peace and Conflict Studies (PCS) as a field cares about gender. Yet, feminist work frequent...
In this paper we argue that the gap between economic analysis and the rest of human life needs to be...
It remains the case that, in spite of the consistently high quality and quantity of gender analysis,...
Feminist International Political Economy (IPE), with its focus on the gendered dimensions of social ...
Feminist discourses have changed the vision of the issues and sites of political encounter that are ...
This study deals with the Feminist challenge to the Mainstream International Relations Discipline (I...
Attempts to integrate feminist security studies (FSS) and feminist global political economy (GPE) we...
This article assesses feminist accounts of co-optation and appropriation in gender and development p...
The development of feminist IPE theory has been profoundly influenced by new schools of thought that...
This article offers a distinctive mapping of the feminist literature on globalisation. Part I sets t...
Feminist International Relations (IR) theory is haunted by a radical feminist ghost. From Enloe's su...
This paper advocates a more explicit feminist discussion of female complicity by demonstrating that ...
This article makes the case for feminist IR to build knowledge of international institutions. It eme...
What kind of theoretical or methodological changes are needed to more effectively theorize global po...
The extensive significance of feminist and gender research clearly does not need demonstrating to t...
Critical Peace and Conflict Studies (PCS) as a field cares about gender. Yet, feminist work frequent...
In this paper we argue that the gap between economic analysis and the rest of human life needs to be...