Equal to What? Feminism in a Fractured Democracy
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Beschrijving
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"Equality" is the word the political slogan never specifies.Equal in which sense? To whom? Measured how? Enforced by what?In Equal to What?, J.J. Ramos argues that the second-wave feminist project of "achieving equality" rested on an assumption that has quietly become false: that the surrounding democratic-institutional infrastructure would continue to function as the medium in which feminist law operates. The courts that interpret the statutes. The agencies that enforce them. The franchise that elects the legislators who write them. The civic organizations that mobilize the constituency. Each of these institutions has been substantially weakened in ways the movement did not adequately see. The visible reversals of the 2020s - Dobbs in 2022, Loper Bright in 2024, the state-level voter-restriction wave that followed Shelby County in 2013 - are not anomalies. They are the predictable result of a long-running institutional project whose feminist response has been small relative to the scale of what was undone.The book is in four parts. Part I unpacks the four meanings the word equality holds in tension and traces the inheritance from Seneca Falls 1848 through the second-wave statute portfolio to the present crack in the institutional floor. Part II walks through the four institutional pillars under pressure: the courts, the administrative agencies, the franchise, and the civic-society infrastructure women historically built and ran. Part III names the four shapes of degraded equality the present moment has produced: rights without remedy, form without substance, vote without voice, recognition without redistribution. Part IV proposes the constructive program: building new institutions rather than only repairing old ones, treating equality as a verb rather than a noun, and constructing the cross-class multiracial coalitions the work requires.Drawing on Catharine MacKinnon's substantive-equality theory, Lani Guinier's The Tyranny of the Majority, Nancy Fraser's recognition / redistribution / representation triad, Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone, Theda Skocpol's Diminished Democracy, and the documented democratic-crisis literature from Levitsky and Ziblatt onward, Ramos joins the democratic-decline literature and the feminist-legal-equality literature into a sustained argument that the present feminist project is, centrally, democratic repair.For readers of How Democracies Die, The Tyranny of the Majority, Sex Equality, Scales of Justice, Bowling Alone, and the rest of the J.J. Ramos catalog - written for the moment when the institutional ground is shifting and the inherited vocabulary does not quite reach the new terrain.
"Equality" is the word the political slogan never specifies.Equal in which sense? To whom? Measured how? Enforced by what?In Equal to What?, J.J. Ramos argues that the second-wave feminist project of "achieving equality" rested on an assumption that has quietly become false: that the surrounding democratic-institutional infrastructure would continue to function as the medium in which feminist law operates. The courts that interpret the statutes. The agencies that enforce them. The franchise that elects the legislators who write them. The civic organizations that mobilize the constituency. Each of these institutions has been substantially weakened in ways the movement did not adequately see. The visible reversals of the 2020s - Dobbs in 2022, Loper Bright in 2024, the state-level voter-restriction wave that followed Shelby County in 2013 - are not anomalies. They are the predictable result of a long-running institutional project whose feminist response has been small relative to the scale of what was undone.The book is in four parts. Part I unpacks the four meanings the word equality holds in tension and traces the inheritance from Seneca Falls 1848 through the second-wave statute portfolio to the present crack in the institutional floor. Part II walks through the four institutional pillars under pressure: the courts, the administrative agencies, the franchise, and the civic-society infrastructure women historically built and ran. Part III names the four shapes of degraded equality the present moment has produced: rights without remedy, form without substance, vote without voice, recognition without redistribution. Part IV proposes the constructive program: building new institutions rather than only repairing old ones, treating equality as a verb rather than a noun, and constructing the cross-class multiracial coalitions the work requires.Drawing on Catharine MacKinnon's substantive-equality theory, Lani Guinier's The Tyranny of the Majority, Nancy Fraser's recognition / redistribution / representation triad, Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone, Theda Skocpol's Diminished Democracy, and the documented democratic-crisis literature from Levitsky and Ziblatt onward, Ramos joins the democratic-decline literature and the feminist-legal-equality literature into a sustained argument that the present feminist project is, centrally, democratic repair.For readers of How Democracies Die, The Tyranny of the Majority, Sex Equality, Scales of Justice, Bowling Alone, and the rest of the J.J. Ramos catalog - written for the moment when the institutional ground is shifting and the inherited vocabulary does not quite reach the new terrain.
AmazonPagina's: 316, Paperback, J.J. Ramos
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