#Degrowth
#Feminism
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From: The future is degrowth: a guide to a world beyond capitalism
3.5. Feminist critique
The feminist critique of growth is based on the thesis that, in a capitalist economy geared towards economic growth and productivity, the vital reproductive work of society – which is largely carried out by women, in particular Indigenous and Black women, and women of colour – remains fundamentally unacknowledged, invisible, devalued, and precarious.
This economic system is therefore essentially a patriarchal one. ...
Reproductive or care work is understood to mean all those activities that directly serve the maintenance and well-being of people, ranging from accompanying children and the elderly to cooking, housework, caring activities, and, in some definitions, gardening or repair work for personal needs, caring for nature, or subsistence farming.
These activities comprise between 30 and 70 per cent of the economic output of a country ...
This crisis is necessarily linked to the crisis-like development of the human–nature relationship. ...
This is the prerequisite and goal of gender justice – and centring care has become a key cornerstone of degrowth.
Download a free (pirate) copy here:
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#degrowth #Feminism #ecofeminism #feministeconomics #AbolitionFeminism
#Degrowth
#Feminism
#EcoFeminism
#AbolitionFeminism
From: The future is degrowth: a guide to a world beyond capitalism
3.5. Feminist critique
The feminist critique of growth is based on the thesis that, in a capitalist economy geared towards economic growth and productivity, the vital reproductive work of society – which is largely carried out by women, in particular Indigenous and Black women, and women of colour – remains fundamentally unacknowledged, invisible, devalued, and precarious.
This economic system is therefore essentially a patriarchal one. ...
Reproductive or care work is understood to mean all those activities that directly serve the maintenance and well-being of people, ranging from accompanying children and the elderly to cooking, housework, caring activities, and, in some definitions, gardening or repair work for personal needs, caring for nature, or subsistence farming.
These activities comprise between 30 and 70 per cent of the economic output of a country ...
This crisis is necessarily linked to the crisis-like development of the human–nature relationship. ...
This is the prerequisite and goal of gender justice – and centring care has become a key cornerstone of degrowth.
Download a free (pirate) copy here:
https://libgen.rocks/ads.php?md5=A045DF81693C3D77A4BEC928CB9D87E4
#degrowth #Feminism #ecofeminism #AbolitionFeminism
#Degrowth
#Feminism
#EcoFeminism
#AbolitionFeminism
From: The future is degrowth: a guide to a world beyond capitalism
3.5. Feminist critique
The feminist critique of growth is based on the thesis that, in a capitalist economy geared towards economic growth and productivity, the vital reproductive work of society – which is largely carried out by women, in particular Indigenous and Black women, and women of colour – remains fundamentally unacknowledged, invisible, devalued, and precarious.
Download a free (pirate) copy here:
https://libgen.rocks/ads.php?md5=A045DF81693C3D77A4BEC928CB9D87E4
#degrowth #Feminism #ecofeminism #AbolitionFeminism
#nowarbutclasswar #degrowth #DefundCapitalism #directdemocracy #Rojava #yemen #kashmir #freepalestine #antifa #lgbtq #ClassStruggleUnionism #RepresentativeDemocracyIsNeither #cats #bds #libertariansocialism #antireligion #antitheism #AbolitionFeminism