Issues of global justice have received increasing attention in academic philosophy in recent years but the gendered dimensions of these issues are often overlooked or treated as peripheral. This groundbreaking collection by Alison Jaggar brings gender to the centre of philosophical debates about global justice.
The explorations presented here range far beyond the limited range of issues often thought to constitute feminists’ concerns about global justice, such as female seclusion, genital cutting, and sex trafficking. Instead, established and emerging scholars expose the gendered and racialized aspects of transnational divisions of paid and unpaid labor, class formation, taxation, migration, mental health, the so-called resource curse, and conceptualizations of violence, honor, and consent. Jaggar’s introduction explains how these and other feminist investigations of the transnational order raise deep challenges to assumptions about justice that for centuries have underpinned Western political philosophy.
Taken together the pieces in this volume present a sustained philosophical engagement with gender and global justice.
Gender and Global Justice provides an accessible and original perspective on this important field and looks set to reframe philosophical reflection on global justice.
Table of Content
Acknowledgments vii
Notes on Contributors viii
Introduction: Gender and Global Justice: Rethinking Some Basic Assumptions of Western Political Philosophy 1
Alison M. Jaggar
1 Transnational Cycles of Gendered Vulnerability: A Prologue to a Theory of Global Gender Justice 18
Alison M. Jaggar
2 Transnational Women’s Collectivities and Global Justice 40
Hye-Ryoung Kang
3 The Moral Harm of Migrant Carework: Realizing a Global Right to Care 62
Eva Feder Kittay
4 Transnational Rights and Wrongs: Moral Geographies of Gender and Migration 85
Rachel Silvey
5 Global Gender Injustice and Mental Disorders 100
Abigail Gosselin
6 Discourses of Sexual Violence in a Global Context 119
Linda Martín Alcoff
7 Reforming Our Taxation Arrangements to Promote Global Gender Justice 147
Gillian Brock
8 Gender Injustice and the Resource Curse: Feminist Assessment and Reform 168
Scott Wisor
Bibliography 193
Index 215
About the author
Alison M. Jaggar is a College Professor of Distinction at the University of Colorado at Boulder in the departments of Philosophy and Women and Gender Studies. Jaggar is also a Research Co-ordinator at the University of Oslo’s Center for the Study of Mind in Nature.