Does Equality Mean Business? Gender Equity at the Crossroads of Feminism and Finance

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March 11, 2016 3:30 pm

2239 Lane Hall

Ramp and elevator access at the E. Washington Street entrance (by the loading dock). There are accessible restrooms on the south end of Lane Hall, on each floor of the building. A gender neutral restroom is available on the first floor.

Özlem Altan, Koç University, Turkey     
Drucilla Barker,  University of South Carolina    
Emily Bent, Pace University
Suzanne Bergeron, University of Michigan-Dearborn  
Rebecca Dingo, University of Massachusetts-Amherst    
Lamia Karim, University of Oregon              
Melissa Fisher, New York University                 
Kathryn Moeller, University of Wisconsin      
Ruby Tapia, University of Michigan    

 

The “business case” for investing in women and girls because it is good for the bottom line has by now permeated the development agenda. While this has brought increased attention to gender issues in the global South, it has also coopted a number of feminist goals. This daylong symposium will draw upon political economy, history of science, feminist rhetoric, politics of global governance, anthropology and other perspectives. 
Schedule:
9:00 a.m.  Coffee and breakfast
9:15 a.m.  Opening Remarks by Suzanne Bergeron, University of Michigan-Dearborn: Engendering Development Beyond “Smart Economics”
9:30 – 11:30 a.m.  Panel 1: Beyond the Financialization of Gender

Lamia Karim, University of Oregon: In Quest for Equality: Female Wage Labor and Entrepreneurship                   
Melissa Fisher, New York University: Beyond White Corporate Feminism                   
Özlem Altan, Koç University, Turkey: Provincializing the Business Case: Contradictions from the Field    
Moderator: Drucilla Barker, University of South Carolina      

1:30 – 3:30 p.m.  Panel 2: Beyond Neoliberal Girl Power

Rebecca Dingo, University of Massachusetts, Amherst: The Value of Girls    
Kathryn Moeller, University of Wisconsin: Corporate Financing for Feminist Futures?            
Emily Bent, Pace University: Relational Girlhoods, Oppositional Divides: Girls’ Activism at the United Nations             
Moderator: Ruby Tapia, University of Michigan

Cosponsored by: Department of Anthropology, Center for Latin American & Caribbean Studies, and the Department of English


Keywords: feminism and finance