Gender Equality, Citizenship and Human Rights: Controversies and Challenges in China and the Nordic Countries

Front Cover
Pauline Stoltz
Routledge, 2010 - Political Science - 196 pages

This comparative volume examines the ways in which current controversies and political, legal, and social struggles for gender equality raise conceptual questions and challenge our thinking on political theories of equality, citizenship and human rights.

Bringing together scholars and activists who reflect upon challenges to gender equality, citizenship, and human rights in their respective societies; it combines theoretical insights with empirically grounded studies. The volume contextualises feminist political theory in China and the Nordic countries and subsequently puts it into a global perspective. It tackles a complex set of tensions across a dense and shifting landscape and addresses issues including labour, health, democracy, homosexuality, migration and racism.

By cutting across geographical and disciplinary boundaries, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of comparative politics, gender studies, human rights and also those interested in Scandinavian and Asian politics.

Other editions - View all

About the author (2010)

Pauline Stoltz (FD) is senior lecturer in political science at Malmö university, Sweden. Her research focuses on notions of citizenship and equality, notably as these concern categories of people who are marginalised according to gender, âe~raceâe(tm) and religion in European societies. A special focus concerns children as citizens in European welfare states and the role of education in welfare state transformations. Her publications include amongst others About Being (T)here and Making a Difference âe"Black Women and the Paradox of Visibility (2000); âe~Politisk Solidaritetâe(tm) in Maktens (o)lika förklädnader âe" Kön, klass och etnicitet i det

postkoloniala Sverige, eds. Paulina de los Reyes, et al. (2002, new ed 2005 and 2006). She is currently working on a book on Children as citizens âe" Equality, Welfare and Education in Transition. Stoltz has been a visiting scholar at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom.

Marina Svensson is an associate professor at the Centre for East and Southeast Asia Studies, Lund University, Sweden. Her research focuses on legal and social issues in China. Among her recent publications are Making Law Work: Implementation of Law in China (forthcoming, co-editor with Mattias Burell), Debating Human Rights in China: A Conceptual and Political History (Rowman and Littlefield, 2002), The Chinese Human Rights Reader (M. E. Sharpe, 2001, co-editor with Stephen C. Angle), and "Fieldwork in Context," in Maria Heimer and Stig Thögersen eds. Fieldwork in China Hawaii University Press and NIAS Press, 2006.

Qi Wang is lecturer at the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo, Norway. She holds a PhD degree in political science and has done postdoctoral research on womenâe(tm)s political participation and gendered aspects of Chinese politics in both Denmark and Sweden. Her main publication includes an edited anthology on Gender Politics in Asian (with Cecilia Milwertz, Wil Brughorn and Kazuki Iwanaga), which is forthcoming; a working paper titled "Renegotiating Gender and Power: Womenâe(tm)s Organizations and networks in Politics -The China Women Mayorsâe(tm) Association", published by the working

paper series, Center for East and Southeast Asian Studies at Lund University in 2003; and a book chapter "State-Society Relations and Women's Political Participation" in Jackie West, Zhao Minghua, Chang Xiangqun, and Cheng Yuan (ed). Women of China: Economic and Social Transformation, London: Macmillan Press LTD, 1999.

 

Zhongxin Sun is Associate Professor of sociology at Fudan University and research fellow for the Nordic Center, Human Rights Center, and the Center for Gender Studies of Fudan. Currently, she is a visiting scholar at Harvard University, working on research projects on social inequalities, gender and sexuality issues in Contemporary China. Her academic publications are on gender, sexuality, youth culture, urban culture, feminist research methods, family, globalization and labor, social stratification and inequality. Her recent publications include a book Feminist Research Methods, co-edited with Lili Zhang (Fudan University Press, 2007), a paper "Shaping Perceptions of Shanghai: Discourses, Images, and Visions" in the book "The Making of Global City Regions: Johannesburg, Mumbai/Bombay, São Paulo, and Shanghai", edited by Klaus Segbers (The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007), a paper "Redefining Chinese Female Identity In the Workplace: Gender, Class and Motherhood in Foreign Companies", in Making it in China, edited by Merete Lie, Ragnhild Lund and Gard Hopsdal Hansen( Norwegian Academic Press, 2008 ), and a paper on gender issues in China in a book titled Women and Politics around the World: A Comparative History and Survey, edited by Joyce Gelb and Marian Lief Palley ( ABC-CLIO, will be out in 2008). Besides, she published a number of papers in English and Chinese journals, such as the China Journal, China Perspective, and Fudan Journal, Gender, Thinking, Society, Sociology, Womenâe(tm)s Research Forum, Tsinghua Education Review, etc.

Bibliographic information