2011
DOI: 10.1080/14036096.2010.518800
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Feminist Epistemologies and the Social Relations of Housing Provision

Abstract: Is research that uses the concept of the social relations of housing provision implicitly centred on men and neglectful of women? In this paper, I look at why this might be the case because of the principles by which the social relations of provision are defined. I look at androcentric bias, referring to principles drawn from feminist epistemologies, and make particular use of some recent work in rural geography and sociology. I then look for evidence of androcentrism in my own work on the social relations of … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…(2) Cultural, highlighting that instead of "universal" knowledge, there are masculine and feminine types of knowledge and gender is treated as a "primordial" division. (3) Post-structuralist, which holds that the binary opposition between male and female constructs and legitimates gender difference (Satsangi 2011).…”
Section: Issues In Feminist Epistemologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(2) Cultural, highlighting that instead of "universal" knowledge, there are masculine and feminine types of knowledge and gender is treated as a "primordial" division. (3) Post-structuralist, which holds that the binary opposition between male and female constructs and legitimates gender difference (Satsangi 2011).…”
Section: Issues In Feminist Epistemologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What is for example the role of gender in rural housing provision and research? Is there an embedded androcentric bias in exploring social relations and power struggles in relation to rural housing inequalities (see also Satsangi 2011;Ziebarth 2009). We also call for more queer perspectives in relation to rural housing need and provision.…”
Section: Conclusion and Further Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Feminist theories have highlighted the importance of gender to understand social functioning ( Butler, 1998 ; Satsangi, 2011 ). Gender, in contrast to sex which refers to the biological characteristics of individuals, is considered as a social structure that produces and reproduces the norms and roles associated with sexual differences and, at the same time, expresses the power relations that exist between these differences ( Butler, 1998 ; Connell, 2012 ; Rubin and Reiter, 1975 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%