Books, Articles and PhDs
How can feminist scholarship advance the field of foreign policy analysis to better understand contemporary foreign policy actions and challenges? This groundbreaking book provides the state-of-the-art in the study of gender, feminisms and foreign policy.
Returning Home examines state responses to repatriation, rehabilitation and reintegration of ISIS returnees from an intersectional perspective, with a focus on ISIS women returnees.
This paper studies the causal impact of female political representation on legislative behavior, social attitudes, and gender-based crime.
This paper examines the link between physical attractiveness and individual support for income redistribution in a non-Western context.
The gender gap in risk preferences in rural farm households, with female farmers commonly viewed as more risk-averse than their male counterparts, may have profound implications for addressing the gendered impacts of climate change.
This paper assesses the costs and benefits to Australian employers of providing 10 days of paid FDV leave to employees experiencing family and domestic violence.
This chapter puts forward a theoretical framework for investigating the war economy as a manifestation of temporal, spatial, and scalar gendered circuits of violence that are produced and reproduced both inside and outside of conflict zones.
This chapter provides an overview of the literature relating to the gendered experiences of wellbeing across three key stages of the life course: employment, parenthood and retirement.
War Economy: Gendered Circuits of Violence and Capital examines the war economy from feminist perspectives, bringing fresh thinking in the context of heightened geopolitical tensions.