Results 61 to 70 of about 6,152 (297)
Trabajo doméstico y de cuidado no remunerado. ¿Quién asume el costo de la reproducción social?
Unpaid domestic work is responsible for social reproduction whose cost must be assumed through public policies by the State, from the perspective of feminist economics.
Alicia Girón
doaj +1 more source
Analysing fiscal policy from the perspective of feminist economics means examining gender equality policies, both in terms of tax revenue and other sources of fund (indebtedness), as well as redistribution and public spending.
Fragoso, Lucía Pérez
core +1 more source
Who Does Bogotá “Care” for? Care Blocks, Care Workers and the Sustainable Development Goals
ABSTRACT This paper critically examines Bogotá's District Care System within the framework of urban social sustainability and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Focusing on the Care Blocks (Manzanas del Cuidado), it employs a mixed‐methods approach—legal analysis, interviews, testimonies, surveys, and InfoCuidado data—to explore the paradox of a
Valentina Montoya‐Robledo +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Foregrounding invisible foundations: (eco-)feminist perspectives on provisioning systems
Debates on provisioning systems have become more widespread in recent years. Most of these discussions, however, have centered on the monetized economy.
Corinna Dengler, Christina Plank
doaj +1 more source
03-11 "Clocks, Creation, and Clarity: Insights on Ethics and Economics from a Feminist Perspective" [PDF]
This essay discusses the origins, biases, and effects on contemporary discussions of economics and ethics of the unexamined use of the metaphor “an economy is a machine.” The neoliberal view that the self-regulated workings of free markets should be kept
Julie A. Nelson
core
THE CITATION IMPACT OF FEMINIST ECONOMICS
Feminist economics is a transformative project. However, transformation generates resistance. Feminist economics can be deliberately excluded, co-opted through an uncritical application of rational choice theory, or ignored. And feminist economics can be
Frances Woolley
core +1 more source
Feminist Economics For Behavioral Economists [PDF]
This paper attempts to elucidate key themes in feminist economics that are relevant to major concerns in behavioral economics, including gender differences in risk aversion.
Austen, Siobhan
core
ABSTRACT The Social and Solidarity Economy (SSE) offers strong potential for sustainable development in low‐income regions, yet its enterprises often operate with scarce resources, weak monitoring systems, and limited visibility. These constraints hinder both their capacity to demonstrate contributions to sustainable development (SD) and their own ...
Maria‐del‐Mar Magallón +1 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Farmers' capabilities, a core component of social sustainability, have been largely neglected in sustainable agriculture discourse. Using a relational approach to capabilities and autonomy, this study explores how women farmers translate the opportunity of agricultural innovation into their valued outcomes, and which factors shape their ...
Dawn D. Cheong, Bettina Bock
wiley +1 more source
This research situates urban planning as a social well-being determinant, highlighting that cities function as social habitats that shape individuals’ quality of life, as well as being physical spaces. The study emphasises the dangers of inadequate urban
Gloria Alarcón-García +2 more
doaj +1 more source

