Friday, October 28, 2011

Intersecton of gender and The State

The book Gender, Politics and the State edited by Vicky Randall and Georgina Waylan is aptly named. Most articles connect the three and how they interact with each other. Yet, we as readers and thinkers need to understand that you cannot analyze women and/in politics without both understanding the structures that constrain choices that individual women make and impact that other choices have on the state and those structures (Waylan, 2). In addition, often times we refer to “the state” or “the government” without realizing that they are not “a unitary structure but a differentiated set of institutions, agencies and discourses, and the product of a particular historical and political conjuncture” (Waylan, 7). Waylan concludes that thus, the state (and its gender policies) are a reflection of the society that built it as well as the society that is currently using it (7).
There are three ways that the state implements policies towards women
  1. policies actually aimed at women
    1. such as protective legislation (in the workplace) and laws aimed at reproduction
  2. policies dealing with relations between men and women
    1. such as property rights, sexuality, family relations
      1. these are often insitutionalized
  3. General policies (which are further sub categorized as
    1. “gender neutral” policies
    2. policies linked to the public sphere and seen as masculine
      1. state-defined politics, war, foreign policy, international trade, resource extraction and long distance communication
    3. policies concerned with welare and social reproduction
      1. home related issues, health and education

[Taken from Charlto et al. (1989) “Women, the State & Development,” Albany, NY: SUNY Press, but found in Waylan, 9-10]

These discussions are important to keep in mind as I switch to the interaction between sex and the state. A helpful definition of the modern European state is one that has the “power which claims the supreme right to make and enforce rules for all the inhabitants of a given territory” (Vogel, 32). In addition, “the state serves to establish a legal order capable of enforcing the peaceful coexistence and cooperation among individuals” (Vogel, 32). A being part of a modern state, an important concept is citizenship. Citizenship “provides a major link between states, individuals and collectives” (Waylan, 12). Citizenship is often presumed to be universal by the fact that citizens are defined by “what they have in common and in opposition to the particular characters of different groups” as well as the idea that “laws and rules are the same for all and are blind to particular individual and group differences” (Nash, 46).

The UN Commission on the Status of Women has been requesting all states to set up “specialized institutions to advance the economic, social and political position of women” (Howell, 167). While Howell notes that women are being employed in post communist Eastern Europe, it is mostly in the “light industries” such as health, education, and textiles (Howell, 169). These industries are often considered less central to the economy and wages are often lower in these sectors of the economy.


Gender, Politics, and the State, edited by Vicky Randall & georgina Waylan. London: Routledge,1998.

Jude Howell, “gender, Civil Society and the State,” 166-184

Kate Nash, “Beyond Liberalism? Feminist Theories of Democracy,” 45-57

Ursular Vogel, “The State and the making of gender: some historical legacies,” 29-44

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