Constructing Scale/Contesting Scale: Women's Movement and Rescaling Politics in Quebec |
| |
Authors: | Masson Dominique |
| |
Affiliation: | Dominique Masson is an associate Professor at the Institute of Womens Studies and the Department of Sociology of the University of Ottawa, Canada. |
| |
Abstract: | Scalar shifts in public capacities and responsibilities arean important element of the way states have been restructuringin North America and in Europe. Womens movements respondto these changes in various ways, including the rescaling ofcollective action. This article focuses on the rising importanceof the (subprovincial) region in Québec womensmovement politics to understand how new scales of action areconstituted or granted a renewed importance by womensmovements. Drawing on theoretical contributions from the humangeography literature on scale, state rescaling, and scalar politics,I show how the region has been materially and discursively constructedby Québec womens movement actors as a legitimateand relevant scale for feminist politics. This has involvedan intricate and dynamic relationship with two different stateprojects of downward rescaling. Although it provided some realopportunities, it has also created difficulties and dilemmasfor womens movement actors, who have also contested theprimacy of the region in Québec governments newscalar arrangements. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 Oxford 等数据库收录! |
|