What Women Want
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 25 September 2014
- ISBN 9780199348275
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages256 pages
- Size 236x157x25 mm
- Weight 476 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
What Women Want comprehensively analyzes the challenges the feminist movement faces today and puts forward a new policy agenda for women.
MoreLong description:
American women fare worse than men on virtually every major dimension of social status, financial wellbeing, and physical safety. Sexual violence remains common, and reproductive rights are by no means secure. Women assume disproportionate burdens in the home and pay a heavy price in the workplace. Yet these issues are not political priorities, and worse, there is a lack of consensus that there still is a serious problem, or at least one that women have any reason or capacity to address. This 'no problem' problem helps explain why women fail to mobilize around issues that materially affect the quality of their lives. Why is this, why does it matter, and how can we best respond?
What Women Want focuses on the policy agenda for women. Deborah L. Rhode, one of the nation's leading scholars on women and law, brings to the discussion a broad array of interdisciplinary research as well as interviews with heads of leading women's organizations. Key questions addressed include whether the women's movement is stalled. What are the major obstacles it confronts? What are its key priorities and what strategies might advance them? In addressing those questions, the book explores virtually all of the major policy issues confronting women. Topics include employment and appearance discrimination, the gender gap in pay and leadership opportunities, work/family policies, childcare, divorce, same- sex marriage, sexual harassment, domestic violence, rape, trafficking, abortion, poverty, and politics. Discussion focuses on the capacities and limits of law as a strategy for social change. Why, despite four decades of enforcement of equal employment legislation, is women's workplace status so far from equal? Why, despite a quarter century's effort at reforming rape law, is America's rate of reported rape the second highest in the developed world? Part of the problem lies in the absence of political mobilization around such issues and the underrepresentation of women in public office. This path-breaking book explores how women can and should act on what they want.
Rhodes book is an excellent introduction to public policy issues as they pertain to women in the US. Rhode (Stanford Univ.) covers the history of the womens movement and provides a state-of-the-art literature review of the legal and political issues women face today.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Women's Movement
Chapter 2 Employment
Chapter 3 Work and Family
Chapter 4 Sex and Marriage
Chapter 5 Reproductive Justice and Economic Security
Chapter 6 Sexual Abuse
Chapter 7 Appearance
Chapter 8 The Politics of Progress