Locating Globalization: Feminist (Re)readings of the Subjects and Spaces of Globalization

The literatures on economic globalization and feminist understandings of global processes have largely remained separate. In this article, our goal is to bring them into productive conversation so that research on globalization can benefit from feminist engagements with globalization. In the first s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEconomic geography Vol. 78; no. 3; pp. 257 - 284
Main Authors Nagar, Richa, Lawson, Victoria, McDowell, Linda, Hanson, Susan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Routledge 01.07.2002
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Clark University
Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Summary:The literatures on economic globalization and feminist understandings of global processes have largely remained separate. In this article, our goal is to bring them into productive conversation so that research on globalization can benefit from feminist engagements with globalization. In the first section, which focuses on the conceptual challenges of bringing the economic globalization literature into conversation with feminist analysis, we identify several key exclusions in that literature and propose parallel inclusions that a feminist reading of globalization suggests. Our suggested inclusions relate to the spaces, scales, subjects, and forms of work that research on economic globalization has largely neglected. The second section takes up several key themes in the large body of feminist research on global economic processes, which is also largely absent from the economic globalization literature: the gendering of work, gender and structural adjustment programs, and mobility and diaspora. In the final section, we address the implications of feminist epistemologies and methodologies for research on economic globalization. Here we argue for grounded, collaborative studies that incorporate perspectives of the south as well as the north and that construct understandings of place and the local, as well as space and general global processes; we point to the coconstitution of different geographic scales and highlight the need for studies that cut across them. The article demonstrates how a feminist analysis of globalization entails far more than recognizing the importance of gender; it requires substantial rethinking of how to conceptualize, study, and act in relation to economic globalization.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-SPPTTHFM-W
ArticleID:ECGE187
istex:E873C485CFECF77447399A005F94AAE2727F9EE1
The authors collaborated fully in conceptualizing, writing, and revising this article, and we wish to acknowledge the pleasures and enrichments of this collaboration. Following an ancient feminist custom, we chose to list the authors in order of age. We thank the reviewers and David Angel for helpful comments on an earlier draft.
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ISSN:0013-0095
1944-8287
DOI:10.1111/j.1944-8287.2002.tb00187.x