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Engendering international relations: what difference does second-generation feminism make?

True, Jacqui

Description

A first-generation of feminist scholarship on international relations challenged the implicitly gendered foundations of mainstream IR, including its masculine conceptual bias and state-centricity and the reliance on positivist ways of knowing. These feminist theoretical challenges cleared the path for new thinking and for the development of distinctly gendered approaches to international relations. A second generation of feminist IR scholarship is now emerging, in which empirical research is...[Show more]

CollectionsANU Research Publications
Date published: 2002
Type: Working/Technical Paper
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1885/41079
http://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/41079

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