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Gendering Global Governance

Gendering Global Governance. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2004, Vol 6, No.4 ,pp. 579–601

This material has been published in International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2004, Vol 6, No.4 ,pp. 579–601. The only definitive repository of the content that has been certified and accepted after peer review. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by Taylor & Francis. This material may not be copied or reposted without explicit permission. (Copyright (C) Taylor & Francis Ltd.). The download of the file(s) is intended for the User's personal and noncommercial use. Any other use of the download of the Work is strictly prohibited. By downloading the file(s), the User acknowledges and agrees to these terms. The web-site of the journal is located at http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/

Abstract

In this article I map out the major debates on global governance and the feminist critiques of the mainstream interventions in these debates. I argue that the shift from government to governance is a response to the needs of a gendered global capitalist economy and is shaped by struggles, both discursive and material, against the unfolding consequences of globalization. I suggest feminist interrogations of the concept, processes, practices and mechanisms of governance and the insights that develop from them should be centrally incorporated into critical revisionist and radical discourses of and against the concept of global governance. However, I also examine the challenges that the concept of global governance poses for feminist political practice, which are both of scholarship and of activism as feminists struggle to address the possibilities and politics of alternatives to the current regimes of governance. I conclude by suggesting that feminist political practice needs to focus on the politics of redistribution in the context of global governance.