A sociopolitical term used in the US to describe African American/black, Asian American, Latina/x, and Native American/Indigenous women.
A term coined by sociologist Arlie Hochschild (1989) referring to the household and caregiving labor performed by women in addition to their wage work.
Theory that our knowledge of gender, race, class, sexuality, ethnicity, body size, ability, religion, and nationality are tied to social processes and therefore constantly being created and recreated by human beings within specific contexts.
Set of economic policies that shape social formations and people’s lived experiences by favoring a free market economy, deregulation of industry, and the privatization of government social programs that erodes the middle class and emphasizes individual responsibility.
Individuals who self-identify outside of the woman/man gender binary.
The industry and its supporters who promote institutional punishment as the solution for social problems in order to further political and financial self-interest.
An environment that normalizes sexual violence against women through a number of cultural practices, including misogynistic social norms, victim blaming, rape myths, and sexual objectification.
Once a pejorative term, it has been reclaimed to describe sexual identities and political issues in lesbian, gay, bisexual, pansexual, polyamorous, transgender, questioning, asexual, and intersexed communities; used to push back against oversimplified and assumed definitions of lesbian and gay identity.
The average difference between men’s and women’s earnings.
The gender assigned to children and used to socialize them into boy/man and girl/woman; may also be referred to as gender assignment.
The integration of learning theoretical concepts with social justice actions so that one’s own behaviors in the world reflect the liberatory philosophies of feminism and queer approaches
A worldview or ideology that assumes and promotes heterosexuality as a preferred sexual orientation and expression.