2012
DOI: 10.1353/jowh.2012.0050
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Transnational Feminism and Contextualized Intersectionality at the 2001 World Conference Against Racism

Abstract: This article examines the organizing efforts of North American feminists from Canada, the United States, and Mexico during the preparatory period prior to the 2001 United Nations World Conference Against Racism held in Durban, South Africa. Preparing for the world conference fostered a process where new transnational coalitions and new articulations of racism flourished; these often overlooked outcomes remain fundamental to understanding transnational feminist interventions at the UN world conference. A tremen… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…Here and elsewhere, intersectionality is seen as promoting “identity politics” and forestalling coalition building (Cho, 2013, p. 292). Others, however, embrace the analytic as a means of enabling people to establish shared interests and solidarity across differences to resist oppression (Falcón, 2012; Ferguson, 2010). Indeed, in her foundational essays, Crenshaw presents a roadmap for coalition-building by demonstrating how single-axis approaches foreclose possibilities for solidarity.…”
Section: Critical Movementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here and elsewhere, intersectionality is seen as promoting “identity politics” and forestalling coalition building (Cho, 2013, p. 292). Others, however, embrace the analytic as a means of enabling people to establish shared interests and solidarity across differences to resist oppression (Falcón, 2012; Ferguson, 2010). Indeed, in her foundational essays, Crenshaw presents a roadmap for coalition-building by demonstrating how single-axis approaches foreclose possibilities for solidarity.…”
Section: Critical Movementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, highly educated migrant professionals more often are categorized and represented as privileged in the migration literature [36][37][38]. Nevertheless, the position of women in human mobility shifts from privileged to vulnerable when human mobility crosses with gender, race, class and other categories and socio-cultural constructions, according to the theoretical and methodological approach given by situated intersectionality [39,40].…”
Section: Self-initiated Expatriates and Return Migration From A Gender Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ser judía te situaba en una situación de opresión en la Alemania nazi, pero te puede colocar en una situación de privilegio en los territorios ocupados. En este sentido, son interesantes las propuestas que abogan por pensar una interseccionalidad situada donde sea el contexto el que nos permita establecer qué ejes de opresión están operando y qué estrategias de resistencia pueden surgir en cada momento (Falcón, 2012). Nosotras rechazamos los enunciados que comienzan como "Las mujeres tienen siempre un instinto maternal" o "las mujeres siempre y en todo lugar son subyugadas por los hombres".…”
Section: Las Intersecciones Que Nos Conformanunclassified