In the hands of women

Paradigms of citizenship

Editors:
Susan Buckingham
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Geraldine Lievesley
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This book opens with a review of some of the significant themes concerning women's citizenship from the perspective of politics. It considers the environment in which women live and the identities they possess and how these characteristics contribute to the nature of their citizenship. The book analyses how its commitment to gender mainstreaming has affected the United Nations' activities, particularly with respect to environmental law. It addresses the nature of women's access to citizenship in the West through considering both women's unfair exposure to environmental problems (in that it is disproportionately negative compared to men's) and the strategies they adopt to redress this. The book considers active citizenship in the urban landscape. It examines women's citizenship in post-communist Russia, focusing on the Soldiers' Mothers' committee. Their existence constitutes an active part of Russia's nascent civil society. The collapse of soviet socialism has had some highly negative consequences for women, including under-representation in political institutions and growing unemployment. Since his election as president in 2000, Putin has sought to create a 'managed democracy' with the aim of co-opting or coercing civil society organisations. Despite this, and the fact that feminist and human rights discourses are quite weak in Russia today, the Soldiers' Mothers' committees continue to grow and have won respect and support.

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