Orlanda Siow
Associate senior lecturer
There is no such thing as ‘women’s representation’: intersectionality and second-generation gender and politics scholarship
Author
Summary, in English
Celis and Childs have called for a ‘second generation’ of feminist scholarship on representation that foregrounds intersectional heterogeneity and emphasises responsiveness to representatives beyond parliaments. We build on these important contributions, arguing that second-generation feminist scholarship and democratic design can make the greatest gains by operationalising intersectionality in close alignment with its origins in Black feminism and critical race theory. First, to foreground intersectional heterogeneity, we posit that feminist scholarship on representation must shift away from the overarching category ‘women’, exemplified in the popular operationalisation of intersectionality as ‘diversity among women’. We instead propose a margins-to-centre approach that centres the intersections of race, gender and other power structures. Second, we exemplify what this shift looks like in practice. We show how centring racially minoritised women and the intersecting structures that position them within political institutions transforms strategies to improve responsiveness to this intersectionally marginalised group.
Department/s
- Department of Gender Studies
Publishing year
2024-04-25
Language
English
Publication/Series
European Journal of Politics and Gender
Links
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Bristol University Press
Topic
- Gender Studies
Keywords
- intersectionality
- representation
- race
- Black feminism
- parliaments
Status
Epub
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2515-1088