
(Un)thinking Citizenship
Feminist Debates in Comtemporary South Africa
Amanda Gouws(Editor)
University of Cape Town Press
Published on 12. April 2005
Book
Paperback/Softback
296 pages
978-1-919713-72-4 (ISBN)
Description
This book brings new perspectives and insights about women's lived experience to the body of existing literature on citizenship. It stimulates debate on issues of citizenship and includes perspectives on poverty, HIV/AIDS, political representation and violence against women. While books with a feminist perspective on different aspects of politics such as rights, voting behaviour, representation, and policy-making have appeared, very few deal explicitly with theory. This book aims to make a contribution to theory building at the same time as incorporating empirical evidence. The text is written in an accessible style so that practitioners, students and politicians may find it useful. Scholars from different disciplines such as political science, law, philosophy, geography and gender studies as well as the voices of activists have been included. The book offers a view from the South, from a developing democracy that is to a large extent viewed as one of the great success stories of democratic transitions.
This book brings new perspectives and insights about women's lived experience to the body of existing literature on citizenship. It stimulates debate on issues of citizenship and includes perspectives on poverty, HIV/AIDS, political representation and violence against women. While books with a feminist perspective on different aspects of politics such as rights, voting behaviour, representation, and policy-making have appeared, very few deal explicitly with theory. This book aims to make a contribution to theory building at the same time as incorporating empirical evidence. The text is written in an accessible style so that practitioners, students and politicians may find it useful. Scholars from different disciplines such as political science, law, philosophy, geography and gender studies as well as the voices of activists have been included. The book offers a view from the South, from a developing democracy that is to a large extent viewed as one of the great success stories of democratic transitions.
This book brings new perspectives and insights about women's lived experience to the body of existing literature on citizenship. It stimulates debate on issues of citizenship and includes perspectives on poverty, HIV/AIDS, political representation and violence against women. While books with a feminist perspective on different aspects of politics such as rights, voting behaviour, representation, and policy-making have appeared, very few deal explicitly with theory. This book aims to make a contribution to theory building at the same time as incorporating empirical evidence. The text is written in an accessible style so that practitioners, students and politicians may find it useful. Scholars from different disciplines such as political science, law, philosophy, geography and gender studies as well as the voices of activists have been included. The book offers a view from the South, from a developing democracy that is to a large extent viewed as one of the great success stories of democratic transitions.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cape Town
South Africa
Publishing group
Juta Academic
Dimensions
Height: 245 mm
Width: 168 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-919713-72-4 (9781919713724)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
From in/exclusion to the constitution of the subject: Constituting 'women' as citizens - ambiguities in the making of gendered political subjects in post-apartheid south africa. Deconstructing the discourse of citizenship: Nationalism displaced - citizenship discourses in the transition; shaping women's citizenship - contesting the boundaries of state and discourse; masculinity, citizenship and political objection to military service in apartheid south africa. Extending the boundaries of the law: Citizenship and the right to child care; towards enhanced citizenship and poverty eradication: a critique of grootboom from a gender perspective; the impact of the hiv/aids epidemic on women's citizenship in south africa. Citizenship as agency: Gendered citizenship in south africa - rights and beyond; merely mothers perpetuating patriarchy? women's grassroots organisations in the western cape 1980 to 1990. Sexualizing citizenship: Escaping heteronormative bondage: sexuality in citizenship; a phenomenology of rape: forging a new vocabulary for action.