Book contents
- Social Rights and the Politics of Obligation in History
- Human Rights in History
- Social Rights and the Politics of Obligation in History
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Not ‘Second-Generation Rights’
- Part I Religion, Markets, States
- Part II Race, Gender, Class
- 8 The Soviet Social
- 9 The Japanese ‘Welfare Society’: Social Rights in Action and the Seeds of the Precariat?
- 10 Liberation Theology, Social Rights and Indigenous Rights in Mexico (c.1965–2000)
- 11 The Unhappy Marriage of Gender and Socio-economic Rights in France
- Part III Social Rights in the Age of Internationalism
- Index
11 - The Unhappy Marriage of Gender and Socio-economic Rights in France
from Part II - Race, Gender, Class
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 January 2022
- Social Rights and the Politics of Obligation in History
- Human Rights in History
- Social Rights and the Politics of Obligation in History
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Not ‘Second-Generation Rights’
- Part I Religion, Markets, States
- Part II Race, Gender, Class
- 8 The Soviet Social
- 9 The Japanese ‘Welfare Society’: Social Rights in Action and the Seeds of the Precariat?
- 10 Liberation Theology, Social Rights and Indigenous Rights in Mexico (c.1965–2000)
- 11 The Unhappy Marriage of Gender and Socio-economic Rights in France
- Part III Social Rights in the Age of Internationalism
- Index
Summary
Gender has always shaped rights in particularly visible ways, from the supposedly abstract, universal and gender-neutral civil and political rights articulated in the French Revolution of 1789, to the twenty-first century, where rights are claimed on the basis of membership in specific groups. Throughout this long period of over two-and-a-quarter centuries, sexual difference has complicated concepts of rights and how they have been recognised and put into practice. This chapter explores these complexities and questions the very category of ‘socio-economic’ rights. Examining the place of sexual difference in conceptualising rights and duties demonstrates that whereas employers and the state acknowledged economic rights and social rights for men, economic rights did not automatically accompany social rights for women. Indeed, these two sets of rights were often at odds, as women’s problematic economic citizenship in France illustrates.
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- Information
- Social Rights and the Politics of Obligation in History , pp. 203 - 222Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022