Gendered Choices

Gendered Choices
Author: Sue Jackson
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2011-03-02
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9400706472

This important book breaks new ground in addressing issues of gendered learning in different contexts across the (adult) life span at the start of the 21st century. Adult learning sits within a shifting landscape of educational policy, profoundly influenced by the skills agenda, by complex funding policies, new qualifications and the widening/narrowing participation debate. The book is unique in highlighting the centrality of gendered choices to these developments which shape participation in and experiences of lifelong learning. Gendered Choices critically examines the continued expansion of a skills-based approach in areas of lifelong learning, including career decisions, professional identities and informal networks. It explores key intersections of adult learning from a gender perspective: notably participation, workplace learning and informal pathways. Drawing on research from a range of contexts, Gendered Choices demonstrates that for women the public/private spaces of work and home are often conflated, although the gendering of ‘choice’ has largely been ignored by policy makers. The themes of the book bring together some of these critical issues, explored through the multiple and fractured identities which constitute gendered lives. The book addresses these in an international context, with contributions from Canada, Spain and Iran that provide a wider international perspective on shared issues.

Gender and Health

Gender and Health
Author: Chloe E. Bird
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2008-01-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780521682800

Gender and Health is the first book to examine how men's and women's lives and their physiology contribute to differences in their health. In a thoughtful synthesis of diverse literatures, the authors demonstrate that modern societies' health problems ultimately involve a combination of policies, personal behavior, and choice. The book is designed for researchers, policymakers, and others who seek to understand how the choices of individuals, families, communities, and governments contribute to health. It can inform men and women at each of these levels how to better integrate health implications into their everyday decisions and actions.

A Gendered Choice

A Gendered Choice
Author: David W. Chadwell
Publisher: Corwin Press
Total Pages: 401
Release: 2010
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1412972590

Across the U.S. about 500 public schools currently offer single-gender classes or programmes. Hundreds more schools are contemplating separate classes for boys and girls in the wake of the 2006 legislation that allows such programmes to satisfy Title IX requirements. Spearheading the national trend in this direction with over 300 single-gender programmes is South Carolina, where David W. Chadwell was appointed the first state coordinator for single-gender initiatives. In this book, Chadwell lays out for administrators the step-by-step process of implementing single-sex programmes and schools in three stages: designing, initiating, and sustaining. A Gendered Choice is a practical, how-to book based upon unique, first-hand experience that interested administrators will want to examine as they contemplate or begin to introduce single-gender programmes in their schools.

Gendered Spaces

Gendered Spaces
Author: Daphne Spain
Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1992
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780807843574

The history of spatial segregation at home and in the workplace and how it reinforces women's inequality.

Gendered Vulnerability

Gendered Vulnerability
Author: Jeffrey Lazarus
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2018-03-02
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0472123599

Gendered Vulnerability examines the factors that make women politicians more electorally vulnerable than their male counterparts. These factors combine to convince women that they must work harder to win elections—a phenomenon that Jeffrey Lazarus and Amy Steigerwalt term “gendered vulnerability.” Since women feel constant pressure to make sure they can win reelection, they devote more of their time and energy to winning their constituents’ favor. Lazarus and Steigerwalt examine different facets of legislative behavior, finding that female members do a better job of representing their constituents than male members.

The Oprah Affect

The Oprah Affect
Author: Cecilia Konchar Farr
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2008-10-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780791476161

Essays explore the broad cultural impact of Oprah’s Book Club.

Liberalism, Neutrality, and the Gendered Division of Labor

Liberalism, Neutrality, and the Gendered Division of Labor
Author: Gina Schouten
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2019-05-02
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0192542451

This book defends progressive political interventions to erode the gendered division of labor as legitimate exercises of coercive political power. The gendered division of labor is widely regarded as the linchpin of gender injustice. The process of gender equalization in domestic and paid labor allocations has stalled, and a growing number of scholars argue that, absent political intervention, further eroding of the gendered division of labor will not be forthcoming anytime soon. Certain political interventions could jumpstart the stalled gender revolution, but beyond their prospects for effectiveness, such interventions stand in need of another kind of justification. In a diverse, liberal state, reasonable citizens will disagree about what makes for a good life and a good society. Because a fundamental commitment of liberalism is to limit political intrusion into the lives of citizens and allow considerable space for those citizens to act on their own conceptions of the good, questions of legitimacy arise. Legitimacy concerns the constraints we must abide by as we seek collective political solutions to our shared social problems, given that we will disagree, reasonably, both about what constitutes a problem and about what costs we should be willing to incur to fix it. The interventions in question would effectively subsidize gender egalitarian lifestyles at a cost to those who prefer to maintain a traditional gendered division of labor. In a pluralistic, liberal society where many citizens reasonably resist the feminist agenda, can we legitimately use scarce public resources to finance coercive interventions to subsidize gender egalitarianism? This book argues that they can, and moreover, that they can even by the lights of political liberalism, a particularly demanding theory of liberal legitimacy.

Gendered Vulnerability

Gendered Vulnerability
Author: Jeffrey Lazarus
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2018-03-02
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0472130714

Analysis-driven study of female candidates and how they represent their constituents better than their male colleagues

The Ethics of Gender-specific Disease

The Ethics of Gender-specific Disease
Author: Mary Ann Gardell Cutter
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 165
Release: 2012
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 0415509971

In this volume, Cutter argues that gender-specific disease and related bioethical discourses are philosophically integrative. Gender-specific disease is integrative because the descriptive roles of gender, disease, and their relation are inextricably tied to their prescriptive roles within frames of reference. While the text mainly focuses on gender-specific diseases that affect women, Cutter also includes examples involving men, children, and members of the LGBT community.