Equality Struggles, Women?s Movements, Neoliberal Markets and State Political Agendas in Scandinavia challenges mainstream scholarship on women?s struggles in three Nordic countries: Denmark, Norway and Sweden. The author explores the intricate ways through which discourses on gender equality as a "national value" inscribe themselves within and through these organizations and their agendas, in a time of neoliberal policies.
The book success admirably in grasping the ambivalent (but intimate) relationship between state institutions and women?s organizations convincingly showing how, where and why these organizations despite inclusive agendas for women?s rights act upon specific class, race and sexual privileges.
Mia Liinason?s refreshing critical scholarship is a very timely contribution to feminist debate. The book is theoretically innovative and politically relevant, written through a reflective, stringent but powerful feminist voice committed to gendered justice.
Prof. Diana Mulinari, Dep. of Gender Studies, Lund University, Sweden
In her thought-provoking book, Mia Liinason creates an original story of women's organizations' struggles for equality in three Scandinavian welfare states: Denmark, Norway and Sweden. A thorough historical and comparative analysis is the basis of a complex narrative, which highlights how governance shapes these struggles and analyses how certain groups were excluded. Liinason's book can be an important source of inspiration for those who continue struggles for equality today.
Johanna Esseveld, Professor Emerita in Sociology, Lund University, Sweden
In Equality Struggles, Mia Liinason presents a carefully crafted discursive analysis of the claims to women's rights that serve both to foster and limit equality in Sweden, Norway and Denmark. With a deep appreciation of the way that power is practiced through the everyday, Liianson reveals the practical opportunities pursued by mainstream women's organizations that illuminate both their contingent agency and the source for their rigidity. The case studies on sex work and anti-discrimination law in particular will be of keen interest to feminist scholars concerned with governance, neo-liberalism and gender politics. The book provides fresh insight to the entanglements of power and opportunity and the necessity for intersectionality that is relevant beyond the Scandinavian context.
Jennifer Suchland, Associate Professor, Ohio State University, USA