What makes Wages for Housework truly exceptional is that it takes women's lived experiences seriously, listening closely to how women themselves understand cash transfers, autonomy, dignity, labour, and citizenship. At a moment when feminist politics globally is struggling to articulate alternatives to right-wing governance, this book offers a bold, empirically grounded, and theoretically rigorous vision of what a feminist care manifesto might look like. It is an indispensable resource for scholars of feminism, development, law, political science, and economics and vital for anyone seeking to imagine a more just social contract centred on care, dignity, and life-making labour.