First published 2006 by Ashgate Publishing
Published 2016 by Routledge
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British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Women and citizenship in Central and Eastern Europe
1. Women - Europe, Central - Social conditions 2. Women -
Europe, Eastern - Social conditions 3. Citizenship - Europe,
Central 4. Citizenship - Europe, Eastern 5. Women in politics
- Europe, Central 6. Women in politics - Europe, Eastern
7. Europe, Central - Politics and government 8. Europe,
Eastern - Politics and government - 1945 - 9. Europe, Central
- Social conditions 10. Europe, Eastern - Social conditions
I.Lukic, Jasmina II. Regulska, Joanna III. Zavirsek, Darja,
1962-
323.608209437
Library of Congress Control Number: 2006926068
Transfercd to Digital Printing in 2012
ISBN: 9780754646624 (hbk)
CONTENTS
Joanna Regulska, Jasmina Luki, Darja Zavirek
Enik Magyari-Vincze
Magorzata Fuszara and Eleonora Zieliska
Salvatore A. Engel-Di Mauro
Jacqueline Heinen
Irina Novikova
Ann Graham and Joanna Regulska
Marina Blagojevi
Anne C. Bellows
Darja Zavirek
Daa Duhaek
Jasmina Luki
Kornelia Slavova
Nanette Funk
Ann Snitow
Darja Zavirek, Joanna Regulska, and Jasmina Luki
Anne C. Bellows, Ph.D. (acbellow@rci.rutgers) is a geographer and planner who specializes in gendered community activisms and rights related to food security, environmental management, and health. She is particularly interested in how public voices and civic action work on behalf of economic rights to food, land access, and health. Her research in Poland as well as other countries looks at the health benefits and risks of urban agriculture. She works as a Research Associate in the Food Policy Institute at Rutgers University, US. She is also the author of several articles and reports on food security, community food security, and the right to food. More specific examples of her work include a history of urban agriculture in Poland; an analysis of the gendered aspects of local environmental management under transition in Poland especially as it effects food security, health, and urban agriculture; and the use of the theory and practice of the womens rights as human rights movement to reconceptualize thinking in concerns for the human right to food.
Marina Blagojevi Ph.D. (marina.blagojevic@chello.hu; marina.blag@beotel.yu) is a senior researcher at the Institute for Criminological and Sociological Research in Belgrade, Serbia, and director of Altera MB Research Centre on Gender and Ethnicity in Budapest, Hungary. She is a sociologist, with a special interest in the sociology of gender and the sociology of interethnic relations. She has taught gender studies at the Central European University in Budapest and Germany. She has also worked as an expert for the European Commission, the European Parliament, and UNDP, as well as for several governments throughout the Balkan region. Her present research interests focus on institutional and cultural as well as societal mechanisms of womens exclusion with a special emphasis on misogyny. Her work is published in several languages and explores the connection between knowledge, development, and gender politics in the transition countries, it focuses on the reconciliation process and positive history of the Balkans.
Daa Duhaek (dasaduh@sezampro.yu), is a professor of political theory and womens studies, currently teaching womens studies at the Faculty of Political Science, University of Belgrade, Serbia. She is also coordinating the Belgrade Womens Studies and Gender Research Center, which she co-founded in 1992. Her fields of research include political philosophy and feminist theory. She is the author of several articles in Serbian and English, which focus on the position and role of women in South-Eastern Europe and feminist theory. She is the co-editor of The Captives of Evil: The Legacy of Hannah Arendt (2002) and the co-Director of the Summer School in Dubrovnik, Feminist Critical Analysis. She is a peace activist.
Salvatore A. Engel-Di Mauro (Salvatore.Engel-DiMauro@uwsp.edu) teaches environmental geography at the Department of Geography and Geology of the University of Wisconsin / Stevens Point. His research focuses on Eastern Europe and is concerned with the interconnections of gender, class, and environmental dynamics in the world system. His publications range from the gendered history of soil science in Hungary to the development of Menominee forestry in Central Wisconsin. His most recent projects address the social environmental implications of the European Union expansion. Among his recent publications are The gendered scientific construction of soils in Hungary, 19001989 (2006); USA. Studi di caso in G. Ricoveri (ed.). Beni comuni fra tradizione e futuro. Quaderni della rivista (2005); The gendered limits to local soil knowledge: macronutrient content, soil reaction, and gendered soil management in SW Hungary (2002); and Gender relations, political economy, and the ecological consequences of state-socialist soil science (2002).
Nanette Funk (NFunk@brooklyn.cuny.edu) is a professor of philosophy at Brooklyn College, City University of New York. Her primary field of interest is political philosophy with a specialization in gender and post-communism. She co-edited Gender Politics and Postcommunism: Reflections on Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union (1993). She has written numerous articles, including Feminist Critiques of Liberalism: Can They Travel East? Their Relevance in Eastern and Central Europe and the Former Soviet Union (2004); Abortion Counseling and the 1995 German Abortion Law (1996); and Feminism Meets Post-Communism: The Case of the United Germany in Susan Weisser and Jennifer Fleischner (eds.), Feminist Nightmares; and Women at Odds (1994). She co-directs the Gender and Transformation Workshop at NYU at the Center for European Studies.