Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1 Beyond the Liberal Dilemma – Rights as Trumps, as Recognition and as Capability
- 2 The Right to Mediation – Recognising the Cultural Particularity of Interests and Vulnerabilities
- 3 Plural Autonomy – Force, Endorsement and Cultural Diversity
- 4 Ordering Souls without Intolerance – Towards a Constrained Presumption for Educational Accommodation
- 5 Unveiling Mediation and Autonomy – Women's Rights as Citizenship and Reciprocity
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- 1 Beyond the Liberal Dilemma – Rights as Trumps, as Recognition and as Capability
- 2 The Right to Mediation – Recognising the Cultural Particularity of Interests and Vulnerabilities
- 3 Plural Autonomy – Force, Endorsement and Cultural Diversity
- 4 Ordering Souls without Intolerance – Towards a Constrained Presumption for Educational Accommodation
- 5 Unveiling Mediation and Autonomy – Women's Rights as Citizenship and Reciprocity
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Women activists in India lead marches to denounce the glorification of acts of widow immolation and campaign for greater state intervention into the problem of dowry death. On the other side of the globe, immigrant women contest the sensationalising images of forced marriage, honour crimes and female genital mutilation portrayed in the international media (see Baker et al.: 1999). Women worldwide campaign for change and yet the local and context-specific character of their claims appears increasingly more salient than the universal commitments to freedom and equality that historically underwrite feminism. At the same time, support for the ideal of multiculturalism, understood as the equitable recognition of all cultural, religious and ethnic groups, appears more precarious than ever in the post-9/11 world. This instability has manifested itself clearly in heightened anxiety over women's rights in non-liberal cultures. In light of these pressing issues, one of the most controversial questions in contemporary political philosophy concerns the possibility of integrating the discourses of feminism and multiculturalism.
The issue was presented starkly a decade ago by Susan Okin's provocatively titled essay, ‘Is Multiculturalism Bad for Women?’ (1999a). Notwithstanding her subsequent qualifications, Okin answered this question in the affirmative, arguing that the majority of the world's cultures are patriarchal and that liberal policies that protect minorities typically entrench gender hierarchies. Unsurprisingly, this perspective has been contested by post-colonial feminists and defenders of multiculturalism (see, for example, al-Hibri 1999; Hutchinson 2000; Steans 2007), who warn against oversimplifying women's interests or simply equating them with Western liberal priorities.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Women's Rights as Multicultural ClaimsReconfiguring Gender and Diversity in Political Philosophy, pp. ix - xviPublisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2009