"Revisiting Gendered States asks how gender relations have shaped changes in states over the last quarter century of global transformations, while continuing to normalize multiple inequalities and the insecurities that accompany them-a topic largely ignored by mainstream IR. These authors provide innovative and illuminating analyses and empirical research revealing the immense diversity in how states remain deeply gendered. They also point to effective
strategies to help move forward resistance to such conditions. Upper level undergraduates, graduate students and scholars in many disciplines will forever think differently about the constitution, practices
and meanings of states after reading these essays."
--Sandra Harding, author of Objectivity and Diversity
"This is an important and timely collection of great provocation. The imagination of international relations today is that the world is immersed in a conflict between the Westphalian state, seen as responsible and an expression of equality, and a loosely conjectured but fearsome Islamic state of terror and persecution. But this simple binary ignores a key feature of the Westphalian state, in both its older imperial and more recent postcolonial form - and that
is its intrinsic and indeed fearsome gendered nature of great inequality and obstruction to equity and humanity. This book, in its rich studies and analyses, makes us all rethink the value of today's
state and question a myriad assumptions upon which we have laboured to build senses of statehood that are exclusionary and, in value terms, corrupt."
--Stephen Chan, OBE, SOAS University of London
"In a period of nationalist and populist state based bombast, this book brings a clear-sighted gendered critique to the debate that is urgently needed. The chapters explore the unravelling of the nation state by global flows of capital and the rising anxieties of patriarchy rooted in the colonial hangover, the place of violence as well as of affect and emotion in the configuration of the masculinized narratives of the 'motherland' that stabilizes state power
even as marginalities are sedimented and new 'others' reproduced. This is an exciting and thought provoking book which should be essential reading for all those who are interested in the contemporary
modes of state formation and development."
--Shirin M Rai, author of The Gender Politics of Development