ABSTRACT
Although intersectionality's academic presence is relatively recent, its influence on social justice movements spans over a century. Feminist economics acknowledges intersectionality's significance for advancing economic justice and analysis, yet its application remains limited. This chapter emphasizes the necessity of incorporating structural power and anti-racism within intersectional economic analysis, advocating for radical transformative change within feminist economics. By employing an intersectional approach, the chapter examines (un)paid work and argues that feminist economics must transcend its focus on gender and imagine beyond the market and growth-based institutional structures if it wants to truly engage with intersectionality's critical stands.
