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Understanding women's involvement in local politics: how useful is a formal/informal dichotomy?

Understanding women's involvement in local politics: how useful is a formal/informal dichotomy?
Understanding women's involvement in local politics: how useful is a formal/informal dichotomy?
Feminist critiques of the public-private (male-female) dichotomy and feminist redefinitions of what is considered ‘political’ both have major implications for considering women's political activity. Arising from this a new dichotomy has emerged which distinguishes ‘formal’ politics from ‘informal’ politics. Taking examples which supposedly lie on either side of this division—local government women's committees and women's community action in London's docklands—our paper explores the usefulness of the formal-informal dichotomy. We outline the similarities which exist between women's political activity in both spheres, the empirical and theoretical interconnections between the spheres, and suggest that the division is invalid at all but a most superficial level. This paper argues that it is vital to move beyond looking at categories to look at the political processes which underlie them.
396-414
Brownill, Sue
ea401e19-885d-4757-93df-3ac3f7be41b7
Halford, Susan
0d0fe4d6-3c4b-4887-84bb-738cf3249d46
Brownill, Sue
ea401e19-885d-4757-93df-3ac3f7be41b7
Halford, Susan
0d0fe4d6-3c4b-4887-84bb-738cf3249d46

Brownill, Sue and Halford, Susan (1990) Understanding women's involvement in local politics: how useful is a formal/informal dichotomy? Political Geography Quarterly, 9 (4), 396-414. (doi:10.1016/0260-9827(90)90036-A).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Feminist critiques of the public-private (male-female) dichotomy and feminist redefinitions of what is considered ‘political’ both have major implications for considering women's political activity. Arising from this a new dichotomy has emerged which distinguishes ‘formal’ politics from ‘informal’ politics. Taking examples which supposedly lie on either side of this division—local government women's committees and women's community action in London's docklands—our paper explores the usefulness of the formal-informal dichotomy. We outline the similarities which exist between women's political activity in both spheres, the empirical and theoretical interconnections between the spheres, and suggest that the division is invalid at all but a most superficial level. This paper argues that it is vital to move beyond looking at categories to look at the political processes which underlie them.

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Published date: October 1990

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 34611
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/34611
PURE UUID: 38847136-58da-4ae9-af7c-665aa5ba9cf9

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Date deposited: 18 Jan 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:48

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Contributors

Author: Sue Brownill
Author: Susan Halford

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