Description
This book presents a wide-ranging comparative analysis of the development of sex-equality policies within Europe. The contributors, comprising both European and US-based scholars, address a very current political issue. This is an area of policy that has reached the decision-making stage in much of Europe and it is thus possible to assess the outcome of policy-making and to account for cross-national variations of sex-equality policy measures.
The contributors discuss the similarities and differences in levels of awareness, commitment to equality of opportunity and readiness to turn rhetoric into reality in a number of west European countries, including Spain, the Netherlands, Britain, Norway and Ireland.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction, Frances Gardiner; Part 1 Contested concepts – selective practice; Chapter 2 Effective utilisation of equality rights, Claire Kilpatrick; Chapter 3 Equality strategies and political representation, Pippa Norris; Chapter 4 The timid and the bold, Frances Gardiner, Monique Leijenaar; Part 2 Elements in the policy community and process; Chapter 5 Sex equality and the rules of the game, Joni Lovenduski; Chapter 6 Incorporating feminism, Joyce Outshoorn; Chapter 7 State feminism and gender equality policies, Celia Valiente; Chapter 8 The organisation of equality policies at the local level, Janneke van der Ros; Part 3 Privatising equality, gendered citizenship, inter/transnational influences; Chapter 9 The privatisation of equality policy in the British employment market for women, Ian Forbes; Chapter 10 Citizenship, welfare state regimes and breadwinner arrangements, Jet Bussemaker; Chapter 11 Dea ex Machina or the interplay between national and international policymaking, Bob Reinalda;



