ABSTRACT

Although emanating from a variety of movements across the globe of every shape and size that engage in offline and/or online activism, such responses in aggregate have been referred to as comprising the global justice movement. Women in their social movement roles as non-state and transnational actors shift attention from "fitting women into" traditional International Relations (IR) frameworks and toward an understanding that accommodates and empowers women's struggles against the hierarchical consequences of practicing global politics-as-usual. Although it offers more examples of feminist and allied social justice movements, it does so in the context of providing an examination of the range of thinking and findings about resistance practices and formations arising out of feminist IR and transnational feminist inquiry. It ends with a review of what this text has argued and how that contributes to what it would mean to engender global justice in more thoroughgoing ways to simultaneously address the crises of representation, insecurity, and sustainability.