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The Palgrave Handbook of Gender and Citizenship



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Autore: Siim Birte Visualizza persona
Titolo: The Palgrave Handbook of Gender and Citizenship Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2024
©2024
Edizione: 1st ed.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (702 pages)
Altri autori: StoltzPauline  
Nota di contenuto: Intro -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Intersectional and Transnational Approaches to Gender and Citizenship: Contributions and Contestations -- 1.1 Citizenship as a Contested Concept -- 1.2 Gender as a Contested Concept -- 1.3 Gendering Citizenship: Intersectional and Transnational Approaches -- 1.4 Normative Challenges to Equality and Social Justice -- 1.5 Concluding Summary and Reflections -- References -- Part I: Theories, Perspectives, and Approaches -- Introduction -- Chapter 2: Global Perspectives on Statelessness and Gender -- 2.1 Citizenship Acquisition -- 2.1.1 Citizenship Criteria -- 2.1.2 Exclusions from the Acquisition of Citizenship -- 2.1.3 Naturalization -- 2.2 Statelessness -- 2.3 The Case of Palestine -- 2.3.1 The Palestinian State Across Multiple Geographies -- 2.3.2 Palestinians in the Motherland and Outside of It -- 2.4 Palestinian Acts of Citizenship -- 2.5 Gendered Perspectives: Palestinian Women and the Motherland -- 2.6 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 3: Decolonising Sexual and Gender Rights: Situated Citizenship and Regimes of Violence -- 3.1 Postcolonial Queerphobia and Colonial Legacies -- 3.2 Homonationalism and Beyond -- 3.3 Trans/Gender Rights and Postcolonial Regimes of Violence -- 3.4 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 4: Mediated Acts of Citizenship: A Postcolonial Perspective -- 4.1 Citizenship, Postcolonial Subjects and Media Participation -- 4.1.1 Postcolonial Citizenship -- 4.1.2 Postcolonial Media -- 4.1.3 Postcolonial Publics -- 4.2 Cases of Postcolonial Acts of Citizenship -- 4.2.1 Io, la mia famiglia Rom e Woody Allen (2009) and Io, Rom Romantica (2014) -- 4.2.2 I Am Queen Mary -- 4.2.3 A Cartoonist for Peace -- 4.3 Concluding Discussion -- References -- Chapter 5: Memory Activism for Gendered and Sexual Citizenship.
5.1 Memory Struggles, Memory Activism, and Gendered and Sexual Citizenship -- 5.2 Memory Activism and Intersectionality -- 5.3 Decolonizing Memory Activism and Intersectionality -- 5.4 Gendered and Sexual Citizenship -- References -- Online Sources -- Online Source on Papua -- Online Sources on Sápmi -- Online Sources on South Africa -- Chapter 6: Gender, Religion, and Citizenship -- 6.1 The Contested Relationships Between Religion, Citizenship, and Inequalities -- 6.2 The Concept of Religious Citizenship: Its Usage and Developments -- 6.3 Entanglements of Religion and Citizenship from Around the World -- 6.3.1 Nationality, Religion, Gender, and Citizenship: India's 2019 Citizenship Amendment Act -- 6.3.2 Religion, Gender, and Citizenship: State Law and Customary Law in Israel and Kuwait -- 6.3.3 Religion as Opportunity and Barrier to Citizenship: Christian and Muslim Women in Norway, Spain, and the United Kingdom -- 6.3.4 Indigenous People: The Sámi People and Citizenship Struggles -- 6.3.5 Using Religion to Protest Religion: The Pussy Riot in Russia -- 6.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: Masculinity, Citizenship, and Intersectionality -- 7.1 Reframing Masculinities and Citizenship: Bringing Together Hegemonic Masculinities and Intersectionality -- 7.2 Citizenship and Militarised Masculinities -- 7.2.1 Military Hegemonic Masculinities -- 7.2.2 Homecoming: From Military to Civilian Life -- 7.3 Concluding Discussion -- References -- Part II: Time, Place, and Space -- Introduction -- Chapter 8: Citizenship as Intimate Belonging: Ansari Begum and the Grandmothers of Shaheen Bagh -- 8.1 The Contemporary Crisis of Belonging -- 8.2 Partition and the Lines of Law -- 8.3 Ansari Begum and the Grandmothers of Shaheen Bagh -- 8.3.1 Not a Better Life but a Return Back Home: Ansari Begum -- 8.3.2 The Home Called India: The Grandmothers of Shaheen Bagh.
8.4 Conclusion: Deep Belonging and the Cultural Politics of Care -- References -- Chapter 9: Precarious Citizenship: Veiled Muslim Women Negotiating and Resisting Disenfranchisement in France -- 9.1 Beyond Rights Discourse: The Precariousness of Intersectional Citizenship -- 9.2 The Making of a Regime of Precarious Citizenship: The Never-Ending Extension of the Prohibition of Islamic Veiling -- 9.3 Schools and Universities: Experiencing the Precariousness of Rights and Citizenship -- 9.3.1 Becoming a Subject of Control and Forcible Emancipation: Traumatic Memories of the 2004 Law -- 9.3.2 The Unpredictable Excess, or When Rights are Withdrawn in Unequal Social Interactions -- 9.4 Intersectional Motherhood and Precarious Citizenship -- 9.5 Strategies of Resistance -- 9.5.1 Knowing the Law -- 9.5.2 Collective Strategies -- 9.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 10: Intersectionality, Women, and Violent Politics in the Americas -- 10.1 Violence Against Women in Politics: Debates and Gaps -- 10.2 Intersectionality in the Texts -- 10.2.1 Model Law -- 10.2.2 House Resolution 801 -- 10.2.3 NDI -- 10.3 Documents Discussion -- 10.4 Twitter Spotlights -- 10.5 Twitter Explorations -- 10.5.1 Case 1: AOC -- 10.5.2 Case 2: Francia Márquez -- 10.5.3 Márquez, Twitter Analysis -- 10.6 Differences and Overlaps -- 10.7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Gender, Political Citizenship and Intersectional Feminism in Australia: #MeToo and the March 4 Justice -- 11.1 Women's Political Citizenship in Australia: Rights and Representation -- 11.2 #MeToo and #March4Justice -- 11.3 Intersectional Feminism and the Australian Women's Movement -- 11.4 Gendering Australian Political Cultures -- 11.5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 12: On Convergences and Divergences: Gendered and Layered Political Citizenship in Ghana and Uganda.
12.1 The Notion of Political Citizenship: Africa in Context -- 12.2 Women's Movements and Collective Mobilisation outside the State -- 12.2.1 Ghana -- 12.2.2 Uganda -- 12.3 The Different Pathways in Statecraft -- 12.3.1 Ghana: Women's Exclusion Amidst Relative Democratic Advancement -- 12.3.2 Uganda: Directed Inclusion of Women in a Chequered Democratic Path -- 12.4 A Synthesis: Pointers for Feminist Comparative Scholarship on Political Citizenship in Africa -- References -- Chapter 13: EU Citizenship in a Gender Perspective -- 13.1 Perspectives on Citizenship -- 13.2 The Contested Nature of Modern Citizenship -- 13.3 EU Citizenship: The Expansion of the Struggle over Citizenship -- 13.4 EU Gender Policies as a Foundation for EU Citizenship -- 13.5 The EU Multi-Level Civil Society Mobilized for Citizenship Rights -- 13.6 Empirical Examples: Gender and EU Citizenship -- 13.7 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 14: Gender and Power in the European Parliament: Intersectional and Transnational Practicing of Citizenship -- 14.1 The EP as a Political Site for Transnational Citizenship -- 14.2 An Intersectional Approach to Transnational Citizenship in the European Context -- 14.3 Transnational Intersectional Practicing of Citizenship in the EP -- 14.4 Transnational Intersectional Practicing of Citizenship Through Alliances -- 14.5 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Part III: Contemporary Issues and Challenges -- Introduction -- Chapter 15: Contested Citizenship in a Settler Colony: Lessons from Canada/Turtle Island -- 15.1 Intersectionality and Settler Colonial States -- 15.2 Positionality and Citizenship Contestations -- 15.3 Citizenship Contradictions, Solidarity, and Co-resistance -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 16: Re-nationalizing Citizenship and Democratic Backsliding: Anti-gender Mobilizations in Central-Eastern Europe.
16.1 Gender as a Marxist Conspiracy -- 16.2 Anti-gender Backlash as a Response to the Current Social and Economic Crisis -- 16.3 Nationalizing Citizenship -- 16.4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 17: Affective Citizenship: Right-Wing Contestations of Women's and Gender Rights -- 17.1 Governing and Disciplining Through Citizenship and Affect -- 17.2 Authoritarian Right-Wing Anti-Gender Discourse: Creating an Authoritarian Masculinist Conjuncture in Germany and Austria -- 17.3 Right-Wing Challenges of Women's and Gender Citizenship Rights -- 17.4 "Affective Citizenship" in the Authoritarian Right-Wing Discourse: Governing the People -- 17.5 Conclusions -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 18: The Far-Right, Anti-gender Politics and Neoliberal Globalization -- 18.1 Far-Right Politics and Gendered Neoliberalism -- 18.2 Far-Right Mobilizations and Gendered Globalization Processes -- 18.3 Anti-gender Mobilizations and Democracy -- 18.4 Moving Forward: Future Challenges for Gender Scholars Researching Oppositional Politics and the Far-Right -- References -- Chapter 19: Sexual Citizenship, Nationalisms, and Bordering: Russian LGBT Activists and the 'Foreign Agent Law' -- 19.1 The Foreign Agent Law -- 19.2 Sexual Citizenship and Activist Citizens -- 19.3 The Sample -- 19.4 Assumptions About Sexual Citizenship and Their Ambivalences in the Russian Context -- 19.5 Nationalisms and Bordering -- 19.6 'Glocalizing' Sexual Citizenship -- References -- Chapter 20: Authoritarianism and Constitutional Reform: A Case-Study of LGBT Rights in Singapore and Taiwan -- 20.1 Singapore -- 20.2 Taiwan -- 20.3 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 21: Gendered Academic Citizenship: Investigating Resources, Recognition and Belonging in Higher Education Institutions -- 21.1 Feminist Rethinking of Citizenship -- 21.2 Multi-level Approach to Academic Careers.
21.3 Academic Citizenship: A Theoretical Framework.
Titolo autorizzato: The Palgrave Handbook of Gender and Citizenship  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 3-031-57144-4
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910865263603321
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