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  1. The Field of Law, Gender and Sexuality: Inclusions and Exclusions. [REVIEW]Sameena Dalwai - 2009 - Feminist Legal Studies 17 (3):319-323.
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  • From Affect to Action: Choices in Attending to Disconcertment in Interdisciplinary Collaborations.Alexandra Hausstein, Erik Fisher & Mareike Smolka - 2021 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 46 (5):1076-1103.
    Reports from integrative researchers who have followed calls for sociotechnical integration emphasize that the potential of interdisciplinary collaboration to inflect the social shaping of technoscience is often constrained by their liminal position. Integrative researchers tend to be positioned as either adversarial outsiders or co-opted insiders. In an attempt to navigate these dynamics, we show that attending to affective disturbances can open up possibilities for productive engagements across disciplinary divides. Drawing on the work of Helen Verran, we analyze “disconcertment” in three (...)
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  • Confronting Law Affectively: Encounters of a Patpong Sex Tourist.Victoria Brooks - 2014 - Law and Critique 25 (3):289-309.
    When considering spaces of sex-work such as Patpong in Bangkok, Thailand, the inclination is to be drawn into habitual debates concerning the legitimacy of sex-work and the clear objectification of sex-workers. While these concerns are valid and real, there are significant absences in terms of the theoretical mapping of the space, such as the affect of the presence of law, bodies, space and the sexual encounter itself. Law emerges as the most significant presence, since it both forms the transactional surface (...)
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  • Social rights and gender justice in the neoliberal moment: A conversation about welfare and transnational politics.with Kate Bedford & Nancy Fraser - 2008 - Feminist Theory 9 (2):225-245.
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  • Loving to Straighten Out Development: Sexuality and Ethnodevelopment in the World bank's Ecuadorian Lending.Kate Bedford - 2005 - Feminist Legal Studies 13 (3):295-322.
    Gender staff in the World Bank -- the world's largest and most influential development institution -- have a policy problem. Having prioritised efforts to get women into paid employment as the ȁ8cure-allȁ9 for gender inequality they must deal with the work that women already do -- the unpaid labour of caring, socialisation, and human needs fulfilment. This article explores the most prominent policy solution enacted by the Bank to this tension between paid and unpaid work: the restructuring of normative heterosexuality (...)
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  • Markets and Sexualities: Introduction. [REVIEW]Kate Bedford - 2010 - Feminist Legal Studies 18 (1):25-28.
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  • Ann Stewart: Gender, Law and Justice in a Global Market: Cambridge UP 2011, ISBN: 9780521746533. [REVIEW]Kate Bedford - 2013 - Feminist Legal Studies 21 (3):331-334.
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  • Post-Fordist Desires: The Commodity Aesthetics of Bangkok Sex Shows. [REVIEW]Ara Wilson - 2010 - Feminist Legal Studies 18 (1):53-67.
    This essay investigates the political economy of sexuality through an interpretation of sex shows for foreigners in Bangkok, Thailand. Reading these performances as both symptoms of, and analytical commentaries on, Western consumer desire, the essay suggests the ‘pussy shows’ parody the mass production that was a hallmark of Western masculine identity under Fordism. This reading makes a case for the erotic generativity of capitalism, illuminating how Western, post-Fordist political economy of the post-1970s generated demand for these erotic services in Asia (...)
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  • Foreign Bodies and National Scales: Medical Tourism in Thailand.Ara Wilson - 2011 - Body and Society 17 (2-3):121-137.
    Medical tourism describes a new pattern of movement of people for medical care, particularly from wealthier to poorer countries. Using the example of Thailand, where annually a million non-Thai patients seek medical treatment, this article provides a critical analysis of the political economic contexts for this medical migration. Drawing on urban geography and heterodox economics, the article considers medical tourism as an interaction of bodily, national, and global scales shaped by processes of globalization. This approach provides a thick context for (...)
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