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Politics & Gender

Journal Information

Politics and Gender

Published by Cambridge University Press

Editors:
Kathleen Dolan, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Aili Tripp, University of Wisconsin Madison
Book Review Editor:
Sue Thomas, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation
Associate Editors:
Martha Ackelsberg, Smith College
Hawley Fogg-Davis, Temple University
V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona
Sue Thomas, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation
Georgina Waylen, University of Sheffield

Volume 1 - Issue 2

Articles

C. Heike Schotten, University of Notre Dame
Prostitution and Masculinity: A Contribution to the Production of New Values

Ilja Luciak, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Party and State in Cuba: Gender Equality in Political Decision-making

Jacqueline Stevens, University of California at Santa Barbara
Pregnancy Envy and the Politics of Compensatory Masculinities

Ted G. Jelen, University of Nevada at Las Vegas, and Clyde Wilcox, Georgetown University
Continuity and Change in Attitudes Toward Abortion: Poland and the United States

Critical Perspectives in Gender and Politics

Martha Ackelsberg, Smith College
Contributions of Women Political Scientists to a More Just World: Introduction

Susan J. Carroll, Rutgers University
Reflections on Activism and Social Change for Scholars of Women and Politics

Barbara Cruikshank, the University of Massachusetts
Too, and Too Little

Melissa Harris-Lacewell, University of Chicago
Contributions of Black Women in Political Science to a More Just World

V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizona
Power, Privilege and Feminist Theory/Practice

Book Reviews

Black Sexual Politics: African-Americans, Gender and the New Racism. By Patricia Hill Collins. New York: Routledge, 2004.
By Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh, Indiana University-Bloomington

Regulating Intimacy: a New Legal Paradigm.
By Jean L. Cohen. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002. 290 pp.
Reviewed by Claire Rasmussen, University of Delaware

Women Making Constitutions: New Politics and Comparative Perspectives. Alexandra Dobrowolsky and Vivien Hart, eds. Basingstoke, Hampshire, and New York. N.Y.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.
By Rosie Campbell, Birkbeck College, London.

Opposing Currents: The Politics of Water and Gender in Latin America. Vivienne Bennett, Sonia Davila-Poblete, and Maria Nieves Rico, eds. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005.
By Liesl Haas. California State University, Long Beach

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Volume 1 - Issue 3

Articles

Karen Zivi, University of Southern California
In Defense of a Politics of Identity

Teri Caraway, University of Minnesota
The Political Economy of Feminization: From "Cheap Labor" to Gendered Discourses of Work

Sujatha Fernandes, Princeton University
Transnationalism and Feminist Activism in Cuba: The Case of Magin

Nicholas Winter, Cornell University
Framing Gender: Political Rhetoric, Gender Schemas, and Public Opinion on Health Care Reform

Critical Perspectives in Gender and Politics

Responses to Julia Adams and Ann Shola Orloff, Defending Modernity? High Politics, Feminist Anti-Modernism and the Place of Gender

Ronald Inglehart, University of Michigan, and Pippa Norris, Harvard University
Modernization and Gender Equality: A Response to Adams and Orloff

Iris Marion Young, University of Chicago
Modernity, Emancipatory Values, and Power: A Rejoinder to Adams and Orloff

Julia Adams, Yale University, and Ann Shola Orloff, Northwestern University
Once More into the Breach with Modernity: Rejoinder to Inglehart, Norris and Young

Book Reviews

Gender and Civil Society: Transcending Boundaries. Jude Howell and Diane Mulligan, eds. Routledge, 2005.
Reviewed by Amy G. Mazur, Washington State University.

Sex and Consequences: Abortion, Public Policy and the Economics of Fertility. By Phillip B Levine. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2004.
By Dorothy E. McBride, Florida Atlantic University.

Abortion Politics in North America. By Melissa Haussman. Boulder, Colorado: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2005.
By Laura R. Woliver, University of South Carolina.

Liberating Economics. Feminist Perspectives on Families, Work, and Globalization. By Drucilla K. Barker and Susan F. Feiner. University of Michigan Press: 2004.
Reviewed by Marion Smiley, Brandeis University.

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Subscribe

Please ask your library to subscribe to POLITICS & GENDER by going to the Politics & Gender homepage at:
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PAG

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Editorial Board

Editors:
Kathleen Dolan, University of Wisconsin Milwaukee, USA
Aili Tripp, University of Wisconsin Madison, USA
Book Review Editor:
Sue Thomas, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, USA
Associate Editors:
Martha Ackelsberg, Smith College, USA
Hawley Fogg-Davis, Temple University, USA
V. Spike Peterson, University of Arizon, USAa
Sue Thomas, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, USA
Georgina Waylen, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
Editorial Board:
Brooke Ackerly, Vanderbilt University, USA
Kate Bratton, Louisiana State University, USA
Louise Chappell, University of Sydney, Australia
Mounira Charrad, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Christina Ewig, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Richard Fox, Union College, USA
Kim Fridkin, Arizona State University, USA
Lisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, USA
Shireen Hassim, University of Witswatersrand, South Africa
Nancy Hirschmann, University of Pennsylvania, USA
Anne Maria Holli, University of Helsinki, Finland
Jane Jenson, Université de Montréal, Canada
L.H.M. Ling, The New School, USA
Timothy Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman College, USA
Sally Kenney, University of Minnesota, USA
Helen Kinsella, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Mona Lena Krook, Washington University in St. Louis, USA
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard University, USA
Joyce Outshoorn, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Kathryn Pearson, University of Minnesota, USA
Jan Jindy Pettman, Australian National University, Australia
Eric Plutzer, Pennsylvania State University, USA
Elisabeth Prugl, Florida International University, USA
Beth Reingold, Emory University, USA
Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University, USA
Molly Shanley, Vassar College, USA
Anna Marie Smith, Cornell University, USA
Wendy Smooth, Ohio State University, USA
Valerie Sperling, Clark University, USA
J. Ann Tickner, University of Southern California, USA
Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame, USA
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Submission Procedure

To submit a manuscript for consideration, please send an electronic copy (in PDF format or in Word) to politicsandgender@cambridge.org

All manuscripts are subject to a double-blind external review procedure. Final decisions concerning publication are made by the Editors.

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Manuscript Preparation

Manuscripts must be no longer than 30 pages including text, tables and figures, references and appendices. The entire paper must be double-spaced, with one-inch margins and 12-point font, and printed on one side of the page only.

The author must include a separate title page, with his or her full contact information and a brief biographical statement.

The title page is the only page on which the author's name should appear; all identifying information must be removed from the manuscript.

A second page must include an abstract of no more than 200 words.

Manuscripts must be submitted in English. Please number all pages.

Manuscripts that do not meet the submission standards will be returned to the author.

Authors should retain copies of any material submitted for consideration; neither Cambridge University Press nor the Editors can accept liability for any loss.

For general guidelines for preparing a manuscript for submission, please refer to the APSA Style Manual for Political Science (rev. ed. 2001) for citation, footnotes, references, and other style issues. Please note, in particular, the statement on gender-specific language (15).

Politics & Gender does not accept articles for review that are under review elsewhere or that have been previously published.

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