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      Grand Challenges, Feminist Answers

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      Organization Theory
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          Feminist organization theories develop knowledge about how organizations and processes of organizing shape and are shaped by gender, in intersection with race, class and other forms of social inequality. The politics of knowledge within management and organization studies tend to marginalize and silence feminist theorizing on organizations, and so the field misses out on the interdisciplinary, sophisticated conceptualizations and reflexive modes of situated knowledge production provided by feminist work. To highlight the contributions of feminist organization theories, I discuss the feminist answers to three of the grand challenges that contemporary organizations face: inequality, technology and climate change. These answers entail a systematic critique of dominant capitalist and patriarchal forms of organizing that perpetuate complex intersectional inequalities. Importantly, feminist theorizing goes beyond mere critique, offering alternative value systems and unorthodox approaches to organizational change, and providing the radically different ways of knowing that are necessary to tackle the grand challenges. The paper develops an aspirational ideal by sketching the contours of how we can organize for intersectional equality, develop emancipatory technologies and enact a feminist ethics of care for the human and the natural world.

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          Most cited references123

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          HIERARCHIES, JOBS, BODIES:: A Theory of Gendered Organizations

          J D Acker (1990)
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            Unpacking the Gender System: A Theoretical Perspective on Gender Beliefs and Social Relations

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              Intersectionality's Definitional Dilemmas

              The term intersectionality references the critical insight that race, class, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, nation, ability, and age operate not as unitary, mutually exclusive entities, but rather as reciprocally constructing phenomena. Despite this general consensus, definitions of what counts as intersectionality are far from clear. In this article, I analyze intersectionality as a knowledge project whose raison d'être lies in its attentiveness to power relations and social inequalities. I examine three interdependent sets of concerns: (a) intersectionality as a field of study that is situated within the power relations that it studies; (b) intersectionality as an analytical strategy that provides new angles of vision on social phenomena; and (c) intersectionality as critical praxis that informs social justice projects.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Organization Theory
                Organization Theory
                SAGE Publications
                2631-7877
                2631-7877
                July 2021
                June 07 2021
                July 2021
                : 2
                : 3
                : 263178772110203
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Radboud Universiteit, Nijmegen, Netherlands
                Article
                10.1177/26317877211020323
                15dc70be-b21c-4fcf-8338-aaf5958a3e08
                © 2021

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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