ABSTRACT

In the modern globalized world of work, society’s capitalist and patriarchal norms perpetuate old and create new differences based on gender, class, ethnicity, age, and other social categorizations.

This book proposes a novel conceptual framework offering theoretical and methodological insights for thinking through the present and future inequality challenges in the globalized world of work and working life issues in the context of spatio-temporal relations. Bringing together global feminist studies of intersectionality and transnationalism, work-life research, and studies of space, place, and identity, this edited collection responds to the growing interest in peripheries, rurality, and other spaces beyond the urban and business market centres. In crossing the theoretical boundaries between intersectionality and peripherality, this volume brings these concepts together to identify how racism, capitalism and heteropatriarchy operate on bodies in the name of work, particularly as expressed in precarious labour conditions. It also advocates for transnational solidarity as part of feminist ethics, while providing an opportunity to reflect on ways forward for feminist intersectional studies of work and working life, drawing on embodied relationality and a feminist ethics of care.

Working Life and Gender Inequality explores the intersectional nature of gender, class, race and other inequalities from a global and spatial perspective. It will be of value to researchers, academics, students, managers, consultants, and policy makers in the fields of organizational studies, leadership, feminist and gender studies, working life, intersectionality and transnational feminism.

chapter 1|19 pages

Intersectionality and Peripheralization

Introduction to the Edited Collection

chapter 3|21 pages

From the Periphery to the Centre of Resistance

Women and/in Anti-Austerity Mobilizations in Crisis-Ridden Athens

chapter 4|20 pages

Intersectional Perspective on Working Life

Poor, Black, Working-Class Women Remain on the Margins – The Case of Paid and Unpaid Domestic Labour

chapter 5|22 pages

The Logic of Intersectional Marginalization

Palestinian and Israeli Practitioners’ Observations of Inequitable Labour Practices in Grassroots Peace Organizing

chapter 6|24 pages

From the Body to the World, from the World to the Body

Ethnography, Migration, and Care 1

chapter 9|19 pages

Risky Subjectivities

Peripheralization and Appropriation of Small-Ward Midwives’ Work Practices in the Closure of a Rural Area’s Maternity Ward

chapter 11|20 pages

Inequality Regimes in Equality Work

New Public Management and Peripheralization Processes in Swedish Schools

chapter 14|19 pages

Thinking through Intersectionality at Work

A Feminist-and-Labour Geographer’s Approach