Results for 'Indian Women'

967 found
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  1.  13
    Indian Women in Doctoral Education in Science and Engineering: A Study of Informal Milieu at the Reputed Indian Institutes of Technology.Namrata Gupta - 2007 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 32 (5):507-533.
    Informal communication and interaction are integral components of the practice of science, including the doctoral process. This article argues that women are disadvantaged in the informal milieu of the higher education in science, and that this milieu is not uniform everywhere. It posits that to understand the position of women in science in South Asian countries like India, the inquiry has to be conceptualized in the specific social, historical, and institutional context. Through a questionnaire survey comparing male and (...)
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  2. American indian women's activism in the 1960s and 1970s.Donna Hightower-Langston - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):114-132.
    : This article will focus on the role of women in three red power events: the occupation of Alcatraz Island, the Fish-in movement, and the occupation at Wounded Knee. Men held most public roles at Alcatraz and Wounded Knee, even though women were the numerical majority at Wounded Knee. Female elders played a significant role at Wounded Knee, where the occupation was originally their idea. In contrast to these two occupations, the public leaders of the Fish-in movement were (...)
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  3.  30
    Indian women through the ages: a historical survey of the position of women and the institutions of marriage and family in India from remote antiquity to the present day.B. S. Bosanquet - 1964 - The Eugenics Review 56 (3):166.
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  4. Indian Women and Science.Ar Rajeshwari - 1993 - In Syed Zahoor Qasim, Science and quality of life. New Delhi, India: Offsetters. pp. 273.
     
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  5.  23
    Indian Women in a Changing Industrial Scenario. [REVIEW]Swasti Mitter - 1993 - Feminist Review 43 (1):88-89.
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  6.  25
    Poems by Indian Women.W. Norman Brown & Margaret MacNicol - 1926 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 46:267.
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  7.  16
    Documents from the Indian Women's Movement.Carol Wolkowitz, Vithubai Patel & Sujata Gothoskar - 1982 - Feminist Review 12 (1):92-103.
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  8.  18
    Melancholic politics and the politics of melancholia: The Indian women’s movement.Srila Roy - 2009 - Feminist Theory 10 (3):341-357.
    Mourning, especially melancholic mourning, has recently emerged as a significant site of expressing and addressing loss in feminism. While feminism’s hard-won successes in achieving institutional power globally have brought exuberance over achievement, they have also come with an acute sense of despondency and loss; one that is not easily mourned or relinquished. The institutionalization of feminism in governmental, non-governmental and academic sites has precipitated this sense of loss in India, wherein the discussion of this article is located. In exploring the (...)
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  9.  23
    The Home, the Veil and the World: Reading Ismat Chughtai towards a ‘Progressive’ History of the Indian Women's Movement.Kanika Batra - 2010 - Feminist Review 95 (1):27-44.
    This paper discusses the work of Ismat Chughtai (1911–1991), a controversial writer whose long literary career extending over four decades roughly corresponds to the formative stages of the Indian women's movement. It interprets Chughtai's novella The Heart Breaks Free (1966) to forward an anti-teleological enquiry of the women's movement in India. This progressive teleology often suggested by a discussion of the ‘waves’, ‘stages’ or ‘phases’ of the Euro-American women's movement and adopted to postcolonial women's movements, (...)
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  10.  15
    Ironies of Emancipation: Changing Configurations of ‘Women's Work’ in the ‘Mission of Sisterhood’ to Indian Women.Jane Haggis - 2000 - Feminist Review 65 (1):108-126.
    On her arrival in Travancore in 1819 Mrs Mault, as wife of the new missionary, immediately set about establishing a school for convert girls and a ‘lace industry’ to employ convert women. Her actions reflect that pattern of activism and organization historians of gender and imperialism have identified as the ‘mission of domesticity’ conducted by European and North American Christian missionary women to their non-Christian ‘sisters’ in the colonial empires being established by their respective nation-states throughout the nineteenth (...)
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  11.  11
    ‘A Miserable Sham’: Flora Annie Steel's Short Fictions and the Question of Indian Women's Reform.Shampa Roy - 2010 - Feminist Review 94 (1):55-74.
    The article examines a few short stories of Flora Annie Steel, a Scottish memsahib who spent a number of decades in the late nineteenth century in India with her husband, a British colonial official. Steel's short stories are interesting because they were produced at a time when most Anglo-Indian fictions (especially those authored by memsahibs) focused exclusively on station romances, and they explore with some seriousness and sense of complexity, issues related to the impact of Imperial reformatory intervention in (...)
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  12.  30
    Gendered Agency in Skilled Migration: The Case of Indian Women in the United States.Namita N. Manohar - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (6):935-960.
    This article examines how skilled middle-class Tamil women—an Indian regional group—negotiate with gender to strategize immigration to and settlement in the United States by drawing on life-history interviews with 33 first-generation professional women, most of whom entered the United States as family migrants. I find that the women negotiate with gender to configure Tamil Brahminical relations of subordination, thereby asserting their subjectivity through “strident embedded agency” in immigration. In this way, they realize gender non-normative desires for (...)
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  13.  22
    Soviet publications: "Vostok [oziens]: Narody azii I afriki" (peoples of asia and africa), and "dialogue: A magazine for soviet and indian women".Marina Blagonravova - 1992 - Philosophy East and West 42 (2):335-337.
  14.  34
    Social Pathways in the Comorbidity between Type 2 Diabetes and Mental Health Concerns in a Pilot Study of Urban Middle‐ and Upper‐Class Indian Women.Lesley Jo Weaver & Craig Hadley - 2011 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 39 (2):211-225.
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  15. Disabled Women: An Excluded Agenda of Indian Feminism.Anita Ghai - 2002 - Hypatia 17 (3):49-66.
    My purpose in this essay is to locate disabled women within the women's movement as well as the disability movement in India. While foregrounding the existential realities for disabled women in the Indian scene, I underscore the reasons for their absence from the agenda of Indian feminism. I conclude by reflecting on the possibilities of inclusion within Indian feminist thought.
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  16.  3
    The Routledge Companion to Indian Ethics: Women, Justice Bioethics and Ecology.Puruṣottama Bilimoria & Amy Rayner (eds.) - 2024 - London: Taylor & Francis.
    This companion volume focuses on the application and practical ramifications of Indian ethics. Here Indian dharma ethics is moved from its preeminent religious origins and classical metaethical proclivity to, what Kant would call, practical reason–or in Aristotle’s poignant terms, ēhikos and phronēis–and in more modern parlance normative ethics. Our study examines a wide range of social and normative challenges facing people in such diverse areas as women’s rights, infant ethics, politics, law, justice, bioethics and ecology. As a (...)
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  17. (En)gendering Indian kitchen: discourses of gender, space and women in Ambai’s ‘A kitchen in the corner of the house’.Rajbir Samal & Binod Mishra - forthcoming - Journal for Cultural Research:1-12.
    In contemporary discourses on gender, the kitchen has been a matter of much contention. On one side, it is considered a prison, but on the other, it is also viewed as a sacred heart of the home. However, in the Indian domestic sphere, the reality and meaning of the kitchen for most women remain much more complex. The article aims to highlight the multiple levels of association women have with kitchen space from the perspective of gender. By (...)
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  18.  27
    Women as Activists; Women as Symbols: A Study of the Indian Nationalist Movement.Suruchi Thapar - 1993 - Feminist Review 44 (1):81-96.
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  19.  26
    Indian system of medicine and women’s health: A clients’ perspective.Papiya Guha Mazumdar & Kamla Gupta - 2007 - Journal of Biosocial Science 39 (6):819.
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  20.  26
    Women and the Family in the Indian Enclave in South Africa.Fatima Merr - 1972 - Feminist Studies 1 (2):33.
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  21.  9
    Women in Early Indian Buddhism: Comparative Textual Studies. Edited By Alice Collett.Liz Wilson - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 (2).
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  22.  14
    The Routledge companion to Indian ethics: women, justice, bioethics and ecology.Purusottama Bilimoria & Amy Rayner (eds.) - 2024 - London ; New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.
    This companion volume focuses on the application and practical ramifications of Indian ethics. It reports on contemporary wide-ranging social and communal challenges facing people in such diverse areas as women and ethics, politics, justice, bioethics and ecology. As a contemporary volume, it builds linkages between existing theories and emerging issues, problems and questions in today's India. The volume brings together contributions from philosophers and contemporary thinkers on practical ethics, exploring both the scope as well as boundaries or limits (...)
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  23.  11
    Power Wealth and Women in Indian Mahayana Buddhism: The Gandavyuha-Sutra.Douglas Osto - 2008 - Routledge.
    This book examines the concepts of power, wealth and women in the important Mahayana Buddhist scripture known as the Gandavyuha-sutra, and relates these to the text’s social context in ancient Indian during the Buddhist Middle Period. Employing contemporary textual theory, worldview analysis and structural narrative theory, the author puts forward a new approach to the study of Mahayana Buddhist sources, the ‘systems approach’, by which literature is viewed as embedded in a social system. Consequently, he analyses the Gandavyuha (...)
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  24. Portrayal of women in Indian Mass Media:An Investigation.Himashree Patowary - 2014 - Journal of Education and Social Policy 1 (1):84-92.
    Media's role towards women is becoming the growing concern of the feminist writers, basically regarding participation, performances and portrayal of women. Because different circumstances relating to media's role towards portraying the fair sex have opened up a new angle by leaps and bounds to think precisely about it.
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  25.  25
    The Conditions of Politics: Low-Caste Women's Political Agency in Contemporary North Indian Society.Manuela Ciotti - 2009 - Feminist Review 91 (1):113-134.
    In this article I analyse the structural and cultural conditions of low-caste women's political agency in urban north India. Whereas in Western feminist political theory, the sexual division of labour is considered to be a key constraint for women's political participation, I show how this has a secondary relevance in the context analysed. I argue that issues concerning the division of labour are intertwined with and subject to those of male consent and support for women's activities. I (...)
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  26.  46
    Amrtā: Women and indian technologies of immortality. [REVIEW]Patrick Olivelle - 1997 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 25 (5):427-449.
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  27.  25
    Women in Early Indian Buddhism: Comparative Textual Studies, edited by Alice Collett. Oxford University Press, 2014. South Asia Research, a Publication Series of the University of Texas South Asia Institute and Oxford University Press. 288pp. [REVIEW]Charles Hallisey - 2016 - Buddhist Studies Review 32 (2):299-304.
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  28.  69
    The Women's Movement in India Today-New Agendas and Old ProblemsThe History of Doing: An Illustrated Account of Movements for Women's Rights and Feminism in India, 1800-1990Fields of Protest: Women's Movements in IndiaReinventing Revolution: New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in IndiaTwo Faces of Protest: Contrasting Modes of Women's Activism in IndiaWomen and Right-Wing Movements: Indian Experiences. [REVIEW]U. Kalpagam, Radha Kumar, Raka Ray, Gail Omvedt, Amrita Basu, Tanika Sarkar & Urvashi Butalia - 2000 - Feminist Studies 26 (3):645.
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  29.  26
    Moral Legislation and Crime Against Women: Explorations in Indian and Western Values.Mayavee Singh - 2023 - Journal of Human Values 29 (3):209-221.
    In recent years, the National Crime Records Bureau recommendation is that the growth rate of crime against women has skyrocketed in India, even higher than the population growth rate. According to lawyer, Kamlesh Vaswani, the commercial exploitation of coital activity paramount in pornography is the result of crimes against women, and fills perverse traits in the roots of society. Following that, he filed a petition (2013) in the Honourable Supreme Court to blanket ban pornography with the aim of (...)
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  30.  32
    A Postcolonial Women's Law? Domestic Violence And The Ontario Liquor Board’s "indian List," 1950-1990.Mariana Valverde - 2004 - Feminist Studies 30 (3):566-588.
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  31.  13
    Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity by Suparno Banerjee (review).Barnita Bagchi - 2024 - Utopian Studies 34 (3):586-590.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity by Suparno BanerjeeBarnita BagchiSuparno Banerjee. Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2020. xiii + 256 pp. E-book, ISBN 9781786836670.Suparno Banerjee’s monograph examines science fiction (henceforth SF) from India, a country that has a rich and fascinating tradition of SF. This is a book that will be of interest and value to scholars and (...)
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  32.  81
    Hume on Justice to Animals, Indians and Women.Arthur Kuflik - 1998 - Hume Studies 24 (1):53-70.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Hume Studies Volume XXIV, Number 1, April 1998, pp. 53-70 Hume on Justice to Animals, Indians and Women ARTHUR KUFLIK I. The Circumstances of Humean Justice For Hume, the virtue of justice is its "usefulness" to the support of society.1 To help prove this point, he guides us through a series of imaginative thought-experiments. Suppose that resources were infinitely available or that human beings were generous and kind (...)
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  33. Reproductive biocrossings: Indian egg donors and surrogates in the globalized fertility market.Jyotsna Agnihotri Gupta - 2012 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 5 (1):25-51.
    A growing number of infertile couples and other individuals desiring children are seeking to fulfill their desire for parenthood transnationally through the use of donor gametes and a surrogate. The number of “fertility tourists” from developed countries to low-income countries is growing phenomenally. Indian women, too, are participating as (re)producers in these “biocrossings,” turning India into the surrogacy outsourcing capital of the world in the globalized bioeconomy of assisted reproduction. I argue for a ban on commercial egg donation (...)
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  34.  11
    Identity and the Politics of American Indian and Hispanic Women Leaders.Diane-Michele Prindeville - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (4):591-608.
    This article examines the influence of race/ethnicity and gender identity on the politics of American Indian and Hispanic women leaders. The data are drawn from personal interviews with 50 public officials and grassroots leaders active in state, local, or tribal politics in New Mexico. Borrowing from Tolleson Rinehart's model of “gender consciousness,” the author creates a classification scheme for assessing the role that race/ethnicity and gender play in the political ideology and motives of the leaders. The findings reveal (...)
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  35.  16
    The Indian subcontinent.Vrinda Dalmiya - 1998 - In Alison M. Jaggar & Iris Marion Young, A companion to feminist philosophy. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell. pp. 118–127.
    The politics of the us/them or West/East divide forms the backdrop to philosophizing about, for and by women in India. Starting with an awareness that “Western woman” cannot mean the same as “Indian woman,” the philosopher here is easily led to an antiessentialism and explosion of a monolithic idea of woman. With such diffusion comes also a variegation in a monochrome “feminism”; for if subjects are multiple, so also are the blueprints for their emancipation. Resting content with a (...)
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  36. Women Empowerment in Present Times.Desh Raj Sirswal & Dinesh Chahal - 2014 - In R. B. S. Verma, GENDER MAINSTREAMING:PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS. pp. 110-114.
    Women Empowerment in Present Times -/- Dr. Dinesh Chahal (Department of Education, Central University of Haryana, Mahendergarh) -/- Dr. Desh Raj Sirswal (Department of Philosophy, P.G. Govt. College for Girls, Sector-11, Chandigarh) -/- India is one of the developing nations of the modern world. It has become an independent country, a republic, more than a half century ago. During this period the country has been engaged in efforts to attain development and growth in various areas such as building infrastructure, (...)
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  37. Jyotiba Phule : A Modern Indian Philosopher.Desh Raj Sirswal - 2013 - Darshan: International Refereed Quarterly Research Journal for Philosophy and Yoga 1 (3-4):28-36.
    JOTIRAO GOVINDRAO PHULE occupies a unique position among the social reformers of Maharashtra in the nineteenth century. While other reformers concentrated more on reforming the social institutions of family and marriage with special emphasis on the status and right of women, Jotirao Phule revolted against the unjust caste system under which millions of people had suffered for centuries and developed a critique of Indian social order and Hinduism. During this period, number of social and political thinkers started movement (...)
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  38.  15
    Native Women's Double Cross: Christology from the Contact Zone.Laura E. Donaldson - 2002 - Feminist Theology 10 (29):96-117.
    One of the hallmarks of American Indian colonial experience was the arrival of Christian missionaries. The response of Native cultures to missionization has been complex, with some resisting the white man's religion and others embracing it. Throughout their contact with Christianity, however, many American Indians appropriated its stories on their own terms and for their own purposes. Stories about Jesus comprise one of the most important sites for this appropriation. This essay examines the ways in which the cultural production (...)
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  39. Indian Ethics and Contemporary Bioethical Issues.Nesy Daniel - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 3:11-17.
    Two fundamental problems in all thought can be identified: One, life and world affirmation and second, life and world negation. Indian approach is characterized as the second and hence it is claimed that moral problems have not been persistently pursued and successfully tackled in India. Points like the advaita concept of liberation, law of karma, the system of social stratification, stages of life and duties associated with them are picked up to show that theIndian system is ethically bankrupt. But (...)
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  40.  38
    An Indian global ethics initiative.Shashi Motilal & Jay Drydyk - 2019 - Journal of Global Ethics 15 (1):1-5.
    In what sense must global ethics be global? In one sense, it must deal with global issues. In another, it must not be parochial but inclusive of normative views from around the world. So far, global ethics has met the first standard much better than the second. Authors based in the global South contribute approximately 5% of the internationally published research on global ethics. With this in mind, the co-editors of this special issue sought to bring more perspectives, experiences, and (...)
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  41.  41
    Ancient women philosophers: recovered ideas and new perspectives.Katharine R. O'Reilly & Caterina Pell- (eds.) - 2023 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    This volume of essays retrieves the largely unresearched thought and the original ideas of ancient women philosophers and carves out a space for them in the canon. The broad focus includes women thinkers in ancient Indian, Chinese, and Arabic philosophy as well as in the Greek and Roman philosophical traditions.
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  42.  32
    (1 other version)Philosophy: An Indian Point of View.Desh Raj Sirswal (ed.) - 2020 - Pehowa: CPPIS.
    The Centre for Positive Philosophy and Interdisciplinary Studies (CPPIS) Pehowa (Kurukshetra) celebrates World Philosophy Day every year via events or publication etc. This time we invited original, scholarly, and unpublished short articles/ideas from research scholars, teachers and academicians on the given sub-themes like Nature of Philosophy, Epistemology, Metaphysics, Ethics, Logic, Aesthetics, Social Philosophy , Political Philosophy, Environmental Philosophy, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Mind, Indian Psychology, Dalit Studies, Women Studies, Philosophical Counseling, Yoga and Mental Health, Philosophical Systems and (...)
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  43.  29
    Estimated fertility rates of Asian and West Indian immigrant women in Britain, 1969–74.Lynne Iliffe - 1978 - Journal of Biosocial Science 10 (2):189-197.
  44.  26
    Abortion services and ethico‐legal considerations in India: The case for transitioning from provider‐centered to women‐centered care.Saurav Basu - 2021 - Developing World Bioethics 21 (2):74-77.
    Nearly a million Indian women lack access to safe and dignified abortion services from public healthcare facilities and instead opt to induce abortions by themselves or with the help from unskilled and unauthorized practitioners. Unsafe abortions account for an estimated 9% of all maternal deaths in India despite the legalization of abortion on all grounds since 1971 via the MTP Act. However, the Act technically does not make any provision for abortion based on a woman’s request alone, subjecting (...)
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  45.  17
    (1 other version)Celebration, preservation and promotion of struggle narratives with a focus on South African women of Indian heritage.Kogie K. Archary & Christina Landman - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (4).
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  46.  43
    Buddhist Nuns and Gendered Practice: In Search of the Female Renouncer by Nirmala S. Salgado, and: Women in Pali Buddhism: Walking the Spiritual Paths in Mutual Dependence by Pascale Engelmajer, and: Women in Early Indian Buddhism: Comparative Textual Studies ed. by Alice Collett.Rita M. Gross - 2015 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 35:226-234.
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  47. Common cause collective strength. Findings of an evaluation of support groups of women and children living with and/or affected by HIV/AIDS in three Indian states.D. Herzog, C. Thiessen, R. Ssekubugu, J. Wagman, M. Kiddugavu, M. J. Wawer, E. Nance, L. Ortolano, K. A. Nash & I. Koc - 2007 - Political Theory 35 (3):313-333.
  48. Wife's duties : A hindu textual and contextual analysis among the educated and professional women in contemporary indian society and the diaspora in uk and usa.Annapurna Devi Pandey - 2005 - In Ashok Vohra, Arvind Sharma & Mrinal Miri, Dharma, the categorial imperative. New Delhi: D.K. Printworld.
     
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  49. The Familiar Face of Genocide: Internalized Oppression among American Indians.Lisa M. Poupart - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):86-100.
    Virtually nonexistent in traditional American Indian communities, today American Indian women and children experience family violence at rates similar to those of the dominant culture. This article explores violence within American Indian communities as an expression of internalized oppression and as an extension of Euro-American violence against American Indian nations.
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  50. American Indian Womenapos;s Activism in the 1960s and 1970s.Donna Hightower Langston - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (2):114-132.
    This article will focus on the role of women in three red power events: the occupation of Alcatraz Island, the Fish-in movement, and the occupation at Wounded Knee. Men held most public roles at Alcatraz and Wounded Knee, even though women were the numerical majority at Wounded Knee. Female elders played a significant role at Wounded Knee, where the occupation was originally their idea. In contrast to these two occupations, the public leaders of the Fish-in movement were (...)-not an untraditional role for women of Northwest Coastal tribes. (shrink)
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