Gender, Work and Organization
2014 - 2025
Current editor(s): David Knights, Deborah Kerfoot and Ida Sabelis From Wiley Blackwell Bibliographic data for series maintained by Wiley Content Delivery (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 28, issue S2, 2021
- Mothering with a career during a pandemic; the case of the Ghanaian woman pp. 277-288

- Philipa Birago Akuoko, Vincent Aggrey and Jennifer Dokbila Mengba
- Lockdown & me …!! Reflections of working women during the lockdown in Vadodara, Gujarat‐Western India pp. 289-306

- Anuratha Venkataraman and Anjali Venkataraman
- Where is my home?: Gendered precarity and the experience of COVID‐19 among women migrant workers from Delhi and National Capital Region, India pp. 307-320

- Shubhda Arora and Mrinmoy Majumder
- A feminist public sociology of the pandemic: Interviewing about a crisis, during a crisis pp. 321-329

- Kate Henley Averett
- The “living dead” within “death‐worlds”: Gender crisis and covid‐19 in India pp. 330-339

- Debadrita Chakraborty
- Touch and contact during COVID‐19: Insights from queer digital spaces pp. 340-347

- Mohammed Cheded and Alexandros Skandalis
- Responses to the COVID‐19 crisis in Ireland: From feminized to feminist pp. 348-365

- Pauline Cullen and Mary P. Murphy
- “Very little but a lot.” Solidarity within the sex workers' community in Poland during the COVID‐19 pandemic pp. 366-377

- Agata Dziuban, Martyna Możdrzeń and Anna Ratecka
- The impact of COVID‐19 pandemic on gender‐related work from home in STEM fields—Report of the WiMPBME Task Group pp. 378-396

- Monique Frize, Lenka Lhotska, Loredana G. Marcu, Magdalena Stoeva, Gilda Barabino, Fatimah Ibrahim, Sierin Lim, Eleni Kaldoudi, Ana Maria Marques da Silva, Peck Ha Tan, Virginia Tsapaki and Eva Bezak
- Invisible people: A story of fertility treatment and loss during the pandemic pp. 397-404

- Heather Griffiths
- “Two hours extra for working from home”: Reporting on gender, space, and time from the Covid‐field of Delhi, India pp. 405-414

- Asiya Islam
- Rethinking research funding in pandemic times pp. 415-418

- Evanthia Kalpazidou Schmidt
- Impacts of the COVID‐19 pandemic on the productivity of academics who mother pp. 419-433

- Salima Kasymova, Jean Marie S. Place, Deborah L. Billings and Jesus D. Aldape
- Pandelivery: Reflections on black delivery app workers experiences during COVID‐19 in Brazil pp. 434-445

- Mariana Luísa da Costa Lage and Antonio Carlos Rodrigues
- “Brazil cannot stop”: Meritocratic ideology in an unequal country pp. 446-460

- Juliana Schneider Mesquita and Marcos Sales Bezerra
- Gender roles during COVID‐19 pandemic: The experiences of Turkish female academics pp. 461-483

- Simel Parlak, Oya Celebi Cakiroglu and Feride Oksuz Gul
- The disproportionate impact of COVID‐19 on women relative to men: A conservation of resources perspective pp. 484-497

- Jessica A. Peck
- Researching gender inequalities in academic labor during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Avoiding common problems and asking different questions pp. 498-509

- Maria do Mar Pereira
- Three walls pp. 510-514

- Mar Pérezts
- A gendered pandemic: Childcare, homeschooling, and parents' employment during COVID‐19 pp. 515-534

- Richard J. Petts, Daniel L. Carlson and Joanna R. Pepin
- Couples' changing work patterns in the United Kingdom and the United States during the COVID‐19 pandemic pp. 535-553

- Yue Qian and Yang Hu
- Women and the weight of a pandemic: A survey of four Western US states early in the Coronavirus outbreak pp. 554-565

- Amber N. W. Raile, Eric D. Raile, David C. W. Parker, Elizabeth A. Shanahan and Pavielle Haines
- Narratives of life‐maneuvering in reshaping new living space during Covid‐19: A case study of women activist in Manggarai Region, Eastern Indonesia pp. 566-573

- Maksimus Regus
- Between vulnerability and resistance: How a woman copes with dramatic implications of COVID‐19 in Russia pp. 574-586

- Lea Katharina Reiss, Andrew Kozhevnikov and Sara Louise Muhr
- Privileged yet vulnerable: Shared memories of a deeply gendered lockdown pp. 587-596

- Irene Ryan, Fiona Hurd, Cassandra Mudgway and Barbara Myers
- Labor market and unpaid works implications of COVID‐19 for Bangladeshi women pp. 597-604

- Mou Rani Sarker
- Syndemic in a pandemic: An autoethnography of a COVID survivor pp. 605-611

- Kishinchand Poornima Wasdani
- Motherhood and guilt in a pandemic: Negotiating the “new” normal with a feminist identity pp. 612-619

- Lilith A. Whiley, Hazel Sayer and Marie Juanchich
Volume 28, issue S1, 2021
- Excuse me, sir?: A critical race theory (hair) chronicle pp. 1-5

- Chelesea Lewellen and Jeremy W. Bohonos
- Fighting racism within ourselves — Even when you have carried your mixed‐race children in your womb pp. 6-13

- Nathalie Clavijo
- Restroom restrictions: How race and sexuality have affected bathroom legislation pp. 14-20

- Tynslei Spence‐Mitchell
- Open letter to the (light) brown‐skinned woman in my neighborhood pp. 21-23

- Kimberly D. Nettles‐Barcelón
- Mobilizing betrayal: Black feminist pedagogy and Black women graduate student educators pp. 24-38

- ArCasia D. James‐Gallaway and Francena F. L. Turner
- Making Black Lives Matter in academia: A Black feminist call for collective action against anti‐blackness in the academy pp. 39-57

- Myrtle P. Bell, Daphne Berry, Joy Leopold and Stella Nkomo
- Marginalized to double marginalized: My mutational intersectionality between the East and the West pp. 58-65

- Amal Abdellatif
- Dual‐earner parent couples’ work and care during COVID‐19 pp. 66-79

- Lyn Craig and Brendan Churchill
- A Brazilian pandemia/monium: A researcher’s search for a ‘New Normal’ pp. 80-88

- Magdalena Cortese Coelho
- Reflections on front‐line medical work during COVID‐19 and the embodiment of risk pp. 89-100

- Emily Yarrow and Victoria Pagan
- COVID‐19 and the gender gap in work hours pp. 101-112

- Caitlyn Collins, Liana Christin Landivar, Leah Ruppanner and William J. Scarborough
- Care and community revalued during the COVID‐19 pandemic: A feminist couple perspective pp. 113-121

- Swati Vohra and Mandeep Taneja
- Navigating uncertainty, employment and women’s safety during COVID‐19: Reflections of sexual assault resistance educators pp. 122-136

- Margaret Janse van Rensburg and Holly Smith
- Freedom or money? The dilemma of migrant live‐in elderly carers in times of COVID‐19 pp. 137-150

- Chiara Giordano
- Virus interruptus: An Arendtian exploration of political world‐building in pandemic times pp. 151-162

- Rita A. Gardiner and Katy Fulfer
- Equalities in freefall? Ontological insecurity and the long‐term impact of COVID‐19 in the academy pp. 163-167

- Katharine A.M. Wright, Toni Haastrup and Roberta Guerrina
- Chaos ruined the children’s sleep, diet and behaviour: Gendered discourses on family life in pandemic times pp. 168-182

- Auður Magndís Auðardóttir and Annadís G. Rúdólfsdóttir
- Opposing the toxic apartheid: The painted veil of the COVID‐19 pandemic, race and racism pp. 183-189

- Grace Gao and Linna Sai
- COVID‐19 as a breakdown in the texture of social practices pp. 190-208

- Michela Cozza, Silvia Gherardi, Valeria Graziano, Janet Johansson, Mathilde Mondon‐Navazo, Annalisa Murgia and Kim Trogal
- Exist or exit? Women business‐owners in Bangladesh during COVID‐19 pp. 209-226

- Jasmine Jaim
- (Dis)embodied encounters between art and academic writing amid a pandemic pp. 227-242

- Emmanouela Mandalaki and Ely Daou
- The differential impact of COVID‐19 on the work conditions of women and men academics during the lockdown pp. 243-249

- T. Murat Yildirim and Hande Eslen‐Ziya
- Brazilian housemaids and COVID‐19: How can they isolate if domestic work stems from racism? pp. 250-259

- Juliana Cristina Teixeira
- The ethics of care and academic motherhood amid COVID‐19 pp. 260-265

- Karyn E. Miller
- What COVID‐19 could mean for the future of “work from home”: The provocations of three women in the academy pp. 266-275

- Danielle L. Couch, Belinda O'Sullivan and Christina Malatzky
Volume 28, issue 6, 2021
- On and off screen: Women's work in the screen industries pp. 1991-1996

- Louise Wallenberg and Maria Jansson
- The price of motherhood in the Irish film and television industries pp. 1997-2009

- Anne O'Brien and Susan Liddy
- The final cut™: Directors, producers and the gender regime of the Swedish film industry pp. 2010-2025

- Maria Jansson, Frantzeska Papadopoulou, Ingrid Stigsdotter and Louise Wallenberg
- “We were released into the so‐called Western world we knew absolutely nothing about”: Professional experiences of female employees in the Lithuanian Film Industry from the postcolonial point of view pp. 2026-2039

- Lina Kaminskaitė‐Jančorienė and Jelena Šalaj
- On the basis of risk: How screen executives’ risk perceptions and practices drive gender inequality in directing pp. 2040-2057

- Amanda Coles and Doris Ruth Eikhof
- Girls gone bad: An essay on “Existence” in Chytilová's Daisies pp. 2058-2075

- Alice Wickström
- Critical considerations of workplace flexibility “for all” and gendered outcomes: Men being flexible about their flexibility pp. 2076-2090

- Ashlee Borgkvist, Vivienne Moore, Shona Crabb and Jaklin Eliott
- Clergy, capital, and gender inequality: An assessment of how social and spiritual capital are denied to women priests in the Church of England pp. 2091-2113

- A. D. J. Fry
- Time's up: Analyzing the feminist potential of time banks pp. 2114-2131

- Juliette Wilson‐Thomas
- Highly skilled, yet invisible. The potential of migrant women with a STEMM background in Italy between intersectional barriers and resources pp. 2132-2157

- Daniela Bolzani, Francesca Crivellaro and Rosa Grimaldi
- Twice a “housewife”: On academic precarity, “hysterical” women, faculty mental health, and service as gendered care work for the “university family” in pandemic times pp. 2158-2179

- Danielle Docka‐Filipek and Lindsey B. Stone
- Gender differences in solo self‐employment: Gendered flexibility and the effects of parenthood pp. 2180-2198

- Lauren Bari, Tom Turner and Michelle O'Sullivan
- Male privilege revisited: How men in female‐dominated occupations notice and actively reframe privilege pp. 2199-2215

- Karin Schwiter, Julia Nentwich and Marisol Keller
- Gender apartheid: The challenges of breaking into “man's world” pp. 2216-2234

- Toyin Ajibade Adisa, Gbolahan Gbadamosi and Olatunji David Adekoya
- “Story time is my duty”: Expatriate academic fathers' experiences of balancing their work and home lives pp. 2235-2251

- Martina Dickson and James Dickson
- Collective bargaining and gender equality (The Gendered Economy) by Jane Pillinger and Nora Wintour, newcastle upon tyne: Agenda publishing, 2019, 175 pp pp. 2252-2255

- Cristina Nunes
- Research, curation, and writing differently—A review of Aesthetics, Organization, and Humanistic Management pp. 2256-2259

- Ruth Elizabeth Slater
Volume 28, issue 5, 2021
- Gender, bodies and identities in organization: Postcolonial critiques pp. 1719-1725

- Andri Georgiadou, Beverly Dawn Metcalfe, Niki Dickerson von Lockette, Dimitria Groutsis and Banu Ozkazanc‐Pan
- The hospitable body at work—A research agenda pp. 1726-1740

- Kristina Zampoukos
- The toll of success: Female leaders in the “women‐friendly” Greek advertising agencies pp. 1741-1765

- Georgia‐Zozeta Miliopoulou and Ilias Kapareliotis
- Emotion, embodiment, and reproductive colonialism in the global human egg trade pp. 1766-1786

- Diane Tober and Charlotte Kroløkke
- Black lives and bodywork matters: A postcolonial critique of gender and embodiment in Nigeria pp. 1787-1804

- Loliya Akobo Kagher, Lilian Otaye‐Ebede and Beverly Metcalfe
- Close encounters: Creating embodied spaces of resistance to marginalization and disempowering representation of difference in organization pp. 1805-1822

- Anna‐Liisa Kaasila‐Pakanen
- “LOOK at YOU!”: Disembodiment between ugly bodies and able minds pp. 1823-1839

- Eleni Damianidou and Andri Georgiadou
- “Against a sharp white background”: How Black women experience the white gaze at work pp. 1840-1858

- Verónica Caridad Rabelo, Kathrina J. Robotham and Courtney L. McCluney
- Gendered workload allocation in universities: A feminist analysis of practices and possibilities in a European University pp. 1859-1875

- Finnborg S. Steinþórsdóttir, Fiona Carmichael and Scott Taylor
- The politics of kitchen work: Co‐production of a retired man's “hegemonic masculinity” during the COVID‐19 quarantine pp. 1876-1884

- Yuchen Han
- Embodied reflections of an able‐bodied disability scholar pp. 1885-1892

- Eline Jammaers
- “Nobody likes a whistleblower.” Witnessing silenced racism and homophobia at work pp. 1893-1897

- Pierre Lescoat
- An autoethnography of pregnancy and birth during Covid times: Transcending the illusio of overwork in academia? pp. 1898-1911

- Ioana Lupu
- Writing memory work through artistic intersections. Unplugged pp. 1912-1925

- Emmanouela Mandalaki and Ely Daou
- Are the gender gaps in informal caregiving intensity and burden closing due to the COVID‐19 pandemic? Evidence from the Netherlands pp. 1926-1936

- Klara Raiber and Ellen Verbakel
- Emotional and financial health during COVID‐19: The role of housework, employment and childcare in Australia and the United States pp. 1937-1955

- Leah Ruppanner, Xiao Tan, Andrea Carson and Shaun Ratcliff
- Breaking the mold: Working through our differences to vocalize the sound of change pp. 1956-1979

- Amal Abdellatif, Maryam Aldossari, Ilaria Boncori, Jamie Callahan, Uracha Chatrakul Na Ayudhya, Sara Chaudhry, Nina Kivinen, Shan‐Jan Sarah Liu, Ea Høg Utoft, Natalia Vershinina, Emily Yarrow and Alison Pullen
- Gender, Space and City Bankers by Helen Longlands pp. 1980-1984

- Corina Sheerin
- Invisible women: Exposing data bias in a world designed for men pp. 1985-1989

- Sonja Sperber
Volume 28, issue 4, 2021
- The Marvelous Arithmetics of Distance” OR “Going Far Together pp. 1201-1202

- Tami Navarro
- Decolonial feminist theory: Embracing the gendered colonial difference in management and organisation studies pp. 1203-1219

- Jennifer Manning
- Countering transphobic stigma: Identity work by self‐employed Keralan transpeople pp. 1220-1236

- Roshni Narendran, James Reveley and Shamika Almeida
- Trans men doing gender at work pp. 1237-1259

- Emma Jeanes and Kirsty Janes
- Working with words: Italian feminism and organization studies pp. 1260-1281

- Marta Equi Pierazzini, Linda Bertelli and Elena Raviola
- The French feminist contribution: Humanizing organizations through esthetically informed, philosophical modes of representation pp. 1282-1303

- Ngaire Bissett and Jill Birch
- Mentoring as affective governmentality: Shame, (un)happiness, and the (re)production of masculine leadership pp. 1304-1322

- Jette Sandager
- Disrupting institutional erasure: Organizational exit, remembrance, value, and the need to matter pp. 1323-1336

- Katherine Grace Hendrix
- Intersecting marginalities: International students' struggles for “survival” in COVID‐19 pp. 1337-1351

- Julia Coffey, Julia Cook, David Farrugia, Steven Threadgold and Penny Jane Burke
- “You’re a teacher you’re a mother, you’re a worker”: Gender inequality during COVID‐19 in Ireland pp. 1352-1362

- Serena Clark, Amy McGrane, Neasa Boyle, Natasha Joksimovic, Lydia Burke, Nicole Rock and Katriona O’ Sullivan
- Fashioning founders: Dress and gender in the entrepreneurial ecosystem pp. 1363-1378

- Harriette Richards and Fabio Mattioli
- A special fund for gender equality? Institutional constraints and gendered consequences in Swedish collective bargaining pp. 1379-1397

- Josefina Erikson
- Writing embodied generosity pp. 1398-1412

- Pauliina Jääskeläinen and Jenny Helin
- A Pluralistic insight on care value: Exuding from sharing gift of unpaid work at home pp. 1413-1425

- Eunjung Koo
- From imperialism to inpatient care: Work differences of Filipino and White registered nurses in the United States and implications for COVID‐19 through an intersectional lens pp. 1426-1446

- Jennifer Nazareno, Emily Yoshioka, Alexander C Adia, Arjee Restar, Don Operario and Catherine Ceniza Choy
- Mothering managers: (Re)interpreting older women's organizational subjectivity pp. 1447-1460

- Leanne Cutcher
- NGOs working for gender justice with boys and men: Exploring challenges of accountability pp. 1461-1474

- Amanda Keddie
- Unpaid care, welfare conditionality and expropriation pp. 1475-1489

- Elise Klein
- Prison is power: Federal correctional officers, gender, and professional identity work pp. 1490-1506

- Cristin A. Compton and Jaclyn K. Brandhorst
- Gender equality and the feminized public sector in the affective struggles over the Finnish Competitiveness Pact pp. 1507-1523

- Miikaeli Kylä‐Laaso, Paula Koskinen Sandberg and Julius Hokkanen
- Gendered skills and unemployed men’s resistance to “women’s work” pp. 1524-1545

- Jill E. Yavorsky, Enrica N. Ruggs and Janette S. Dill
- Deepening inequalities: What did COVID‐19 reveal about the gendered nature of academic work? pp. 1546-1561

- Anna Maria Górska, Karolina Kulicka, Zuzanna Staniszewska and Dorota Dobija
- Manning the waves: Masculinity shift amongst Filipino seafarers in the age of precarity pp. 1562-1578

- Nelson Turgo
- What are men's roles and responsibilities in the feminist project for gender egalitarianism? pp. 1579-1599

- Ajnesh Prasad, Alejandro Centeno, Carl Rhodes, Muhammad Azfar Nisar, Scott Taylor, Janne Tienari and Ozan Nadir Alakavuklar
- Writing multi‐vocal intersectionality in times of crisis pp. 1600-1623

- Katja Einola, Anna Elkina, Grace Gao, Jennifer Hambleton, Anna‐Liisa Kaasila‐Pakanen, Emmanouela Mandalaki, Ling Eleanor Zhang and Alison Pullen
- Gender, business and human rights: Academic activism as critical engagement in neoliberal times pp. 1624-1637

- Kate Grosser
- What can critical femininity offer reviewing? A case for reviewing with empathy pp. 1638-1642

- Lilith A. Whiley
- The subversive potential of witchcraft: A reflection on Federici's Self‐reproducing movements pp. 1643-1660

- Maria Daskalaki
- On being ignored pp. 1661-1664

- Joyce Wu
- Black British female managers—The silent catastrophe pp. 1665-1682

- Denise A. Miller
- Making black lives don't matter via organizational strategies to avoid the racial debate: The military police in Brazil pp. 1683-1696

- Rafael Alcadipani, Dennis Pacheco Lopes da Silva, Samira Bueno and Renato Sergio de Lima
- The political is personal: Postfeminism and the construction of the ideal working mother pp. 1697-1710

- Helen Delaney and Katie R. Sullivan
- Me not you: The trouble with mainstream feminism pp. 1711-1713

- Vincenza Priola
- Women and work: Feminism, labor, and social reproduction pp. 1714-1717

- Ayşe Arslan
Volume 28, issue 3, 2021
- Feminist solidarity: Practices, politics, and possibilities pp. 857-863

- Alice Wickström, Rebecca W. B. Lund, Susan Meriläinen, Siri Øyslebø Sørensen, Sheena J. Vachhani and Alison Pullen
- Feminist solidarities: Theoretical and practical complexities pp. 864-877

- Jo Littler and Catherine Rottenberg
- Implicit feminist solidarity(ies)? The role of gender in the social movements of the Greek crisis pp. 878-897

- Hara Kouki and Andreas Chatzidakis
- The importance of vibrant materialities in transforming affective dissonance into affective solidarity: How the Countess Ablaze organized the Tits Out Collective pp. 898-916

- Lynne F. Baxter
- Feminist solidarity building as embodied agonism: An ethnographic account of a protest movement pp. 917-934

- Sanela Smolović Jones, Nik Winchester and Caroline Clarke
- Queering space and organizing with Sara Ahmed’s Queer Phenomenology pp. 935-949

- Chloé Vitry
- Women's entrepreneurship in Saudi Arabia: Feminist solidarity and political activism in disguise? pp. 950-972

- Sophie Alkhaled
- Wage politics and feminist solidarity pp. 973-991

- Paula Koskinen Sandberg
- Struggles for distinction: Classing as discursive process in UK museum work pp. 992-1007

- Samantha Evans, Rebecca Whiting and Kate Mackenzie Davey
- Author‐ize me to write: Going back to writing with our fingers pp. 1008-1022

- Emmanouela Mandalaki
- Maternal presenteeism: Theorizing the importance for working mothers of “being there” for their children beyond infancy pp. 1023-1039

- Alison Edgley
- Tempered disruption: Gender and agricultural professional services pp. 1040-1058

- Alison Sheridan and Lucie Newsome
- Commodifying feminism: Economic choice and agency in the context of lifestyle influencers and gender consultants pp. 1059-1078

- Magdalena Petersson McIntyre
- Rethinking gender equity in the contaminated university: A methodology for listening for music in the ruins pp. 1079-1097

- Kirsten Locke, Rebecca W. B. Lund and Susan Wright
- Unsanitized writing practices: Attending to affect and embodiment throughout the research process pp. 1098-1114

- Dide van Eck, Noortje van Amsterdam and Marieke van den Brink
- Delivering gender justice in academia through gender equality plans? Normative and practical challenges pp. 1115-1132

- Sara Clavero and Yvonne Galligan
- Sustaining a career in general practice: Embodied work, inequality regimes, and turnover intentions of women working in general practice pp. 1133-1151

- Susan Mayson and Anne Bardoel
- Trapped within ideological wars: Femininities in a Muslim society and the contest of women as leaders pp. 1152-1176

- Fitri Hariana Oktaviani, Bernard McKenna and Terrance Fitzsimmons
- Emotional labor, ordinary affects, and the early childhood education and care worker pp. 1177-1190

- Nikki Fairchild and Eva Mikuska
- Out of time: The queer politics of postcoloniality pp. 1191-1194

- Olimpia Burchiellaro
- Gender and corporate boards: The route to a seat at the table pp. 1195-1198

- Charlotte Holgersson
Volume 28, issue 2, 2021
- Changing writing/writing for change pp. 449-455

- Katie Beavan, Benedikte Borgström, Jenny Helin and Carl Rhodes
- How can I turn my feminist ethnographic engagement into words? A perspective on knowledge production inspired by Audre Lorde pp. 456-470

- Léa Dorion
- Writing for survival (… and to breathe) pp. 471-480

- Caroline Rodrigues Silva
- With the margins: Writing subaltern resistance and social transformation pp. 481-496

- Devi Vijay, Shalini Gupta and Pavni Kaushiva
- Writing grief, breathing hope pp. 497-505

- Nina Kivinen
- Writing with rocks pp. 506-522

- Anu Valtonen and Alison Pullen
- Client care strategies, stressors, and solutions in frontline anti‐trafficking work pp. 523-546

- Corinne Schwarz
- Introduction to domestic violence, abuse, and coercive control for counselors: An evaluation of the impact of training pp. 547-557

- Leonor Rodriguez, Elizabeth Power and Evelyn Glynn
- Volunteering masculinities in search and rescue work: Is there “a place for girls on the team”? pp. 558-574

- Sarah‐Louise Weller, Caroline A Clarke and Andrew D Brown
- Context matters: Problematizing the policy‐practice interface in the enactment of gender equality action plans in universities pp. 575-593

- Caitríona Ní Laoire, Carol Linehan, Uduak Archibong, Ilenia Picardi and Maria Udén
- “All are welcome here?”: Navigating race, class, gender, sexual orientation, age, and disability in American feminist coffeehouses of the 1970s and 1980s pp. 594-609

- Alex D. Ketchum
- Job crafting as dynamic displays of gender identities and meanings in male‐dominated occupations pp. 610-625

- Ai Yu and Harishchandra Jyawali
- “The King was pregnant”: Organizational studies and speculative fiction with Ursula K. Le Guin pp. 626-640

- Janet G. Sayers and Lydia A. Martin
- Migration, service work, and masculinity in the global South: Private security guards in post‐socialist China pp. 641-655

- Susanne Y. P. Choi and Siran Li
- Transformative events: Feminist experiments in writing differently pp. 656-671

- Veera Elina Kinnunen, Sandra Sinikka Wallenius‐Korkalo and Pälvi Marjaana Rantala
- Career constructions and a feminist standpoint on the meaning of context pp. 672-700

- Charlotte M. Karam and Fida Afiouni
- Interfaces of domestic violence and organization: Gendered violence and inequality pp. 701-721

- Tracy Wilcox, Michelle Greenwood, Alison Pullen, Anne O’Leary Kelly and Deborah Jones
- Resistance and praxis in the making of feminist solidarity: A conversation with Cynthia Enloe pp. 722-734

- Ajnesh Prasad and Ghazal Zulfiqar
- Chronicles of conflicting care in confinement: Documenting the work experiences of seven ‘patient zeros’ pp. 735-748

- Dide van Eck and Eline Jammaers
- Leading through social distancing: The future of work, corporations and leadership from home pp. 749-767

- Elena P. Antonacopoulou and Andri Georgiadou
- What life in favelas can teach us about the COVID‐19 pandemic and beyond: Lessons from Dona Josefa pp. 768-782

- Camilla Quental and Yuliya Shymko
- COVID‐19 and the immediate impact on young people and employment in Australia: A gendered analysis pp. 783-794

- Brendan Churchill
- The shadow pandemic: Inequitable gendered impacts of COVID‐19 in South Africa pp. 795-806

- Bianca Rochelle Parry and Errolyn Gordon
- Towards a feminist parental ethics pp. 807-825

- Simon Kelly and Adele Senior
- Women and burnout in the context of a pandemic pp. 826-834

- Maryam Aldossari and Sara Chaudhry
- Searching for “home,” writing to find it: A reflective account on experiences of othering in life and academia in times of generalized crises pp. 835-848

- Emmanouela Mandalaki
- Getting in and getting on in the youth labour market pp. 849-851

- Emily Rainsford
- Redeeming leadership: An anti‐racist feminist intervention. Helena Liu Bristol, UK: Bristol University Press, 2020, 216 pp pp. 852-856

- Klara Regnö
Volume 28, issue 1, 2021
- Reimagining value: A feminist commentary in the midst of the COVID‐19 pandemic pp. 1-7

- Banu Ozkazanc‐Pan and Alison Pullen
- Radicalizing diversity (research): Time to resume talking about class pp. 8-23

- Laurence Romani, Patrizia Zanoni and Lotte Holck
- ‘There’s nowhere wonky left to go’: Gentrification, queerness and class politics of inclusion in (East) London pp. 24-38

- Olimpia Burchiellaro
- Symbolic violence in embodying customer service work across the urban/rural divide pp. 39-53

- Vijayta Doshi
- Critical race theory and working‐class White men: Exploring race privilege and lower‐class work‐life pp. 54-66

- Jeremy W. Bohonos
- Learning the rules of the game: How is corporate masculinity learned and enacted by male professionals from nonprivileged backgrounds? pp. 67-84

- Andreas Giazitzoglu and Daniel Muzio
- Twenty‐five years of Gender, Work and Organization: A bibliometric analysis pp. 85-118

- Aakanksha Kataria, Satish Kumar and Nitesh Pandey
- Care for the self, overcompensation and bodily crafting: The work–life balance of disabled people pp. 119-137

- Eline Jammaers and Jannine Williams
- Care work, gender inequality and technological advancement in the age of COVID‐19 pp. 138-154

- Julie MacLeavy
- An uneven playing field: Experiences of female legal practitioners in Zimbabwe pp. 155-174

- Farai Maunganidze and Debby Bonnin
- Social dominance, hypermasculinity, and career barriers in Nigeria pp. 175-194

- Toyin Ajibade Adisa, Chima Mordi, Ruth Simpson and Vanessa Iwowo
- Managing menopause at work: The contradictory nature of identity talk pp. 195-214

- Belinda Steffan
- Disciplined discourses: The logic of appropriateness in discourses on organizational gender equality policies pp. 215-230

- Nathalie Amstutz, Melanie Nussbaumer and Hanna Vöhringer
- The Munchetty controversy: Empire, race, and the BBC pp. 231-247

- Yasmin Ibrahim and Anita Howarth
- Everyday sexism and racism in the ivory tower: The experiences of early career researchers on the intersection of gender and ethnicity in the academic workplace pp. 248-267

- Dounia Bourabain
- “I have turned into a foreman here at home”: Families and work–life balance in times of COVID‐19 in a gender equality paradise pp. 268-283

- Andrea Hjálmsdóttir and Valgerður S. Bjarnadóttir
- Understanding, ownership, or resistance: Explaining persistent gender inequality in public services pp. 284-300

- Linda Colley, Sue Williamson and Meraiah Foley
- Maneuvering within postfeminism: A study of gender equality practitioners in Danish academia pp. 301-317

- Ea Høg Utoft
- The politics of gendered space: Social norms and purdah affecting female informal work in Dhaka, Bangladesh pp. 318-336

- Lutfun Nahar Lata, Peter Walters and Sonia Roitman
- Rationalizing the postfeminist paradox: The case of UK women veterinary professionals pp. 337-360

- Lorna Treanor, Susan Marlow and Janine Swail
- “The long arm of the household”: Gendered struggles in combining paid work with social and civil participation over the lifecourse pp. 361-378

- Jane Parry, Katherine Brookfield and Vicki Bolton
- The inclusivity of inclusion approaches: A relational perspective on inclusion and exclusion in organizations pp. 379-396

- Laura Dobusch
- The gender gap in wages over the life course: Evidence from a British cohort born in 1958 pp. 397-415

- Heather Joshi, Alex Bryson, David Wilkinson and Kelly Ward
- Girl bosses, punk poodles, and pink smoothies: Girlhood as Enterprising Femininity pp. 416-438

- Anna Alexandersson and Viktorija Kalonaityte
- Transnational migration and the new subjects of work: Transmigrants, hybrids and cosmopolitans pp. 439-442

- Vedran Omanović
- Writing differently Alison Pullen, Jenny Helin and Nancy Harding (Eds.) Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020, 248 pp., £75.00 pp. 443-445

- Ilaria Boncori
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