Susan Buckingham
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Karen Morrow
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This book discusses a wide range of situations where women's citizenship is contested. Essentialist arguments about the nature of women seem at odds with legal-liberal concepts of citizenship which stress individual rights of citizens and argue that differences that might exist (religious, ethnic, gender, sexual) are irrelevant to acquisition of citizenship. Women have taken their grievances into a range of locations, the diversity of which is important if these are to be successfully addressed. Liberal citizenship theory should be regarded as problematic with respect to all groups, including women, who historically have been excluded from its purview and its practice. The issue of women's relationship to men with respect to the pursuit of rights needs to be considered here. Men are interested in many of the issues around which women mobilise: for example, fair trade, human rights, poverty and debt, environmental justice and sustainability, improved working conditions, peace and anti-racism.

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In the hands of women

Paradigms of citizenship

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