SOCIAL PROVISIONING AS A STARTING POINT FOR FEMINIST ECONOMICS
Marilyn Power
Feminist Economics, 2004, vol. 10, issue 3, 3-19
Abstract:
The past decade has seen a proliferation of writing by feminist economists. Feminist economists are not identified with one particular economic paradigm, yet some common methodological points seem to be emerging. I propose making these starting points more explicit so that they can be examined, critiqued, and built upon. I use the term “social provisioning” to describe this emerging methodology. Its five main components are: incorporation of caring and unpaid labor as fundamental economic activities; use of well-being as a measure of economic success; analysis of economic, political, and social processes and power relations; inclusion of ethical goals and values as an intrinsic part of the analysis; and interrogation of differences by class, race-ethnicity, and other factors. The paper then provides brief illustrations of the use of this methodology in analyses of US welfare reform, gender and development, and feminist ecological economics.
Keywords: Social provisioning; feminist political economics; feminist methodology; welfare reform; gender and development; feminist ecological economics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2004
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DOI: 10.1080/1354570042000267608
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