Publication | Closed Access
Thinking through work: complex inequalities, constructions of difference and trans-national migrants
287
Citations
59
References
2008
Year
EthnicityHuman MigrationGlobal MigrationEducationTrans-national MigrantsFeminist GeographyClass StudiesSocial SciencesIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Feminist Legal StudiesGender IdentityGender StudiesCultural DiversityTransnational WorkIdentity IssueComplex InequalitiesMigration PolicyGender DiscriminationOppression StudiesIntersectionalityEqual OpportunityMulticulturalismMigration (Educational Migration)Feminist TheoryIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Feminist PhilosophyCultureSociologyTransnational MobilityMigrant WorkerCultural CitizenshipLabour Market Position
This paper raises questions — rather than providing answers — about the theorization of intersectionality: the complex inequalities that result from connections between gender, class, ethnicity and other dimensions of identity in the making of subjects. I draw on Ong's work on cultural citizenship and notions of subjectification from Foucault and Butler to think through feminist theorizations of intersectionality and the philosophical status of different approaches to complexity and difference. I also address methodological issues. While this is not primarily an empirical paper, I use the example of the labour market position of recent migrants into the UK as an examplar of intersectionality at work.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1