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Mill, Political Economy, and Women's Work
by
HIRSCHMANN, NANCY J.
in
Ambiguity
/ Commercial production
/ Discourses
/ Division of labor
/ Division of labour
/ Economic growth
/ Economic value
/ Economics
/ Economists
/ Egalitarianism
/ Equal rights
/ Equality
/ Females
/ Feminism
/ GDP
/ Gender equality
/ Gender equity
/ Gender inequality
/ GNP
/ Gross Domestic Product
/ Gross National Product
/ Household economics
/ Households
/ Housewives
/ Housework
/ Ideology
/ Labor
/ Labor market
/ Medical Services
/ Mill, John Stuart
/ Mothers
/ Occupational status
/ Political discourse
/ Political economists
/ Political Economy
/ Political science
/ Political scientists
/ Political theory
/ Power
/ Pregnancy
/ Property
/ Radicalism
/ Scientists
/ Sex
/ Sex Fairness
/ Sexual division of labor
/ Subjection
/ Theorists
/ Value
/ Wages
/ Welfare reform
/ Welfare Services
/ Women
/ Women's role
/ Women's work
/ Womens rights
/ Work
/ Working mothers
/ Working Women
2008
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Mill, Political Economy, and Women's Work
by
HIRSCHMANN, NANCY J.
in
Ambiguity
/ Commercial production
/ Discourses
/ Division of labor
/ Division of labour
/ Economic growth
/ Economic value
/ Economics
/ Economists
/ Egalitarianism
/ Equal rights
/ Equality
/ Females
/ Feminism
/ GDP
/ Gender equality
/ Gender equity
/ Gender inequality
/ GNP
/ Gross Domestic Product
/ Gross National Product
/ Household economics
/ Households
/ Housewives
/ Housework
/ Ideology
/ Labor
/ Labor market
/ Medical Services
/ Mill, John Stuart
/ Mothers
/ Occupational status
/ Political discourse
/ Political economists
/ Political Economy
/ Political science
/ Political scientists
/ Political theory
/ Power
/ Pregnancy
/ Property
/ Radicalism
/ Scientists
/ Sex
/ Sex Fairness
/ Sexual division of labor
/ Subjection
/ Theorists
/ Value
/ Wages
/ Welfare reform
/ Welfare Services
/ Women
/ Women's role
/ Women's work
/ Womens rights
/ Work
/ Working mothers
/ Working Women
2008
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Mill, Political Economy, and Women's Work
by
HIRSCHMANN, NANCY J.
in
Ambiguity
/ Commercial production
/ Discourses
/ Division of labor
/ Division of labour
/ Economic growth
/ Economic value
/ Economics
/ Economists
/ Egalitarianism
/ Equal rights
/ Equality
/ Females
/ Feminism
/ GDP
/ Gender equality
/ Gender equity
/ Gender inequality
/ GNP
/ Gross Domestic Product
/ Gross National Product
/ Household economics
/ Households
/ Housewives
/ Housework
/ Ideology
/ Labor
/ Labor market
/ Medical Services
/ Mill, John Stuart
/ Mothers
/ Occupational status
/ Political discourse
/ Political economists
/ Political Economy
/ Political science
/ Political scientists
/ Political theory
/ Power
/ Pregnancy
/ Property
/ Radicalism
/ Scientists
/ Sex
/ Sex Fairness
/ Sexual division of labor
/ Subjection
/ Theorists
/ Value
/ Wages
/ Welfare reform
/ Welfare Services
/ Women
/ Women's role
/ Women's work
/ Womens rights
/ Work
/ Working mothers
/ Working Women
2008
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Journal Article
Mill, Political Economy, and Women's Work
2008
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Overview
The sexual division of labor and the social and economic value of women's work in the home has been a problem that scholars have struggled with at least since the advent of the “second wave” women's movement, but it has never entered into the primary discourses of political science. This paper argues that John Stuart Mill's Political Economy provides innovative and useful arguments that address this thorny problem. Productive labor is essential to Mill's conception of property, and property was vital to women's independence in Mill's view. Yet since Mill thought most women would choose the “career” of wife and mother rather than working for wages, then granting that work productive status would provide a radical and inventive foundation for women's equality. Mill, however, is ambiguous about the productive status of domestic labor, and is thereby representative of a crucial failure in political economic thought, as well as in egalitarian liberal thought on gender. But because Mill at the same time develops a conception of production that goes well beyond the narrow limits offered by other prominent political economists, he offers contemporary political scientists and theorists a way to rethink the relationship of reproductive to productive labor, the requirements for gender equality, and the accepted categories of political economy.
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