“Women in Turbulent Times is an incisive contribution to our understanding of the contemporary polycrisis, offering a much-needed feminist analysis of the interlocking economic, social, and environmental disruptions shaping women’s lives and society more broadly. The opening and concluding chapters frame the volume with a unique, historically grounded and gender-attuned lens and the book’s three empirical sections delve deeply into the tensions in labour markets and social reproduction, and the challenges brought about by digitalisation and the green transition. Across these chapters, the authors reveal the uneven and often contradictory consequences for women, shaped by class, race, and geography. These accounts, from a variety of countries, expose the persistent tensions between production and the essential work of care and social reproduction, and underscore the need for state action to protect secure work and the foundational care economy. This volume is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand and respond to the gendered contours of our turbulent era.” — Marian Baird, Professor of Gender and Employment Relations and Co-Director of the Sydney Employment Relations Research Group in the University of Sydney Business School.“How are employment relations and gender equality faring amid multiple “crises,” including the care crisis, the transition to a net-zero economy, and the profound transformations driven by digitalization and artificial intelligence? If you are seeking answers, this is the book you have been waiting for. It offers far more than a valuable collection of essays addressing these pressing questions. By mobilizing the framework of social reproduction and adopting an intersectionally-sensitive lens, the opening and concluding chapters weave together evidence from diverse national contexts into a thought-provoking conceptual tapestry. In doing so, they issue a timely warning against complacency regarding progress toward gender equality. I highly recommend this volume to students and scholars alike, as well as to policymakers committed to advancing gender and labour equality.” — Francesca Bettio, Retired Professor of Economics at the University of Siena, Italy.“From a study of how the successive and interlocked shocks of the financial crisis, austerity and Covid-19 have impacted gender equality, the editors progress to embed these ‘poly crises’ in the underlying problems of climate change and the care deficit and the current challenges from the Russia-Ukraine war, the migration crisis, the unpredictable effects of AI, and the political turn to the right around the globe. The resulting accessible but thoughtful study looks beyond the market economy to women’s roles in both production and social reproduction and deepens understanding of the threats to wellbeing and prospects for stability in our increasingly turbulent world.” — Jane Humphries, Professor of economic history (emeritus) Oxford and Centennial Professor (emeritus) LSE.“This book compellingly reconnects production and social reproduction through a gender lens, offering readers a key framework for making sense of today’s interlocking crises and the profound transformations reshaping work. Situating the financial and Covid-19 crises alongside ongoing digital and green transitions, it exposes the intersecting inequalities of gender, class, race, ethnicity, and migration that structure contemporary economic developments. In doing so, it provides a comprehensive and much needed understanding of current socioeconomic dynamics, while also envisioning the political, economic, and social transformations required to reorganize societies in ways that support the flourishing of human and non-human life.” — Emanuela Lombardo, Professor of Political Science Scuola Normale Superiore, Florence, Italy.“This is not just another book about gender and crisis; it is a powerful rethinking of how crises themselves become engines of gendered transformation. Moving from the financial crash to the pandemic and today’s overlapping emergencies, the authors brilliantly show how gender relations are not temporarily disrupted but fundamentally reworked through austerity, precarity, care reconfigurations, climate and technological change and moralized discourses of responsibility. With analytical precision, methodological rigor and political urgency, this book exposes how gender equality is redefined in turbulent times. A major contribution and an insightful and necessary intervention.” — Valeria Pulignano, Professor of Sociology at KU Leuven, Belgium and author of ‘The Politics of Unpaid Labour’, Oxford.