Providing a comprehensive feminist political economy analysis of gender and global trade, this book challenges existing approaches to gender in global trade governance that prioritise market-based solutions to inequality.The authors reveal how the power dynamics shaping trade governance unfold on gendered terrain. Tracing the emergence of gender mainstreaming in trade and its implementation in digital and food trade, they caution that dominant ‘free trade feminist’ approaches risk perpetuating gender-based and intersectional inequalities.Weaving rigorous academic theory with cutting-edge policy analysis, they disrupt conventional wisdom about women’s empowerment in trade and establish a feminist research agenda for transformative trade governance.
Adrienne Roberts is Senior Lecturer in International Politics at the University of Manchester and Director of the Political Economy Centre.Silke Trommer is Senior Lecturer in Comparative Public Policy at the University of Manchester and Director of the Manchester Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence.
1. Introduction: Troubling the Gender and Trade Agenda in Global Governance2. Gender, Inequality and Global Trade3. The Rise of Free Trade Feminism4. Food Trade5. Digital Trade6. Conclusion: Beyond Free Trade Feminism
"Why did the WTO suddenly become a promoter a kind of 'free trade feminism'? This very readable book provides not just a fascinating answer but also an important critique of this ideology." Eric Helleiner, University of Waterloo
Erin Hannah, James Scott, Silke Trommer, Canada) Hannah, Erin (King's University College, UK) Scott, James (University of Manchester, Australia) Trommer, Silke (Murdoch University
Erin Hannah, James Scott, Silke Trommer, Canada) Hannah, Erin (King's University College, UK) Scott, James (University of Manchester, Australia) Trommer, Silke (Murdoch University