The 20th Annual Women’s Studies Conference Women and Labor: At Home, At Work, Around the Globe”

Southern Connecticut State University

 

Women’s Studies Program

 

Presents

 

The 20th Annual Women’s Studies Conference

“Women and Labor: At Home, At Work, Around the Globe”

 

To be held on the campus of Southern Connecticut State University

Friday and Saturday, April 20 and 21

 

 

INVITATION FOR PROPOSALS ON INTERDISCIPLINARY SCHOLARLY AND CREATIVE WORK

Our 20th annual conference addresses one perennial struggle in women’s movements across the globe: labor.  As we witness this spring the surge of labor movements in the U.S. as labor is challenged–specifically, unionized & feminized labor, we also receive findings, just released in May 2011 by Ms. Foundation for Women, that women are bearing the brunt of today’s economic crisis.  More than ever, women’s labor is at the forefront of our struggles.  In a different part of the world, we continue to observe women’s critical contribution to what is now called the Arab Awakening.  Yet we, too, see little representation of women in the wake of the Egyptian revolution.  By all accounts, the report cards on women and labor have made less than significant progress over the decades.  In this annual conference, we invite colleagues and activists to take a close look at all issues concerning women and labor, in both private and public domains as well

as globally and locally.  Employed as a category of analysis in women’s and gender studies, feminist analyses of gender and labor do not simply travel throughout diverse communities and academic disciplines in the U.S., but they also travel globally, generating significant connections with other fields.  With this conference, we will have an opportunity to examine the body of activist and scholarly feminist work on women and labor.  What aspect of labor continues to be the struggle that women share across the race, ethnicity, class, sexuality, nationality divide?   How might we begin to talk about women and labor without collapsing the multicultural, heterogeneous, global and transnational within us?  How have women contributed their labor artistically, culturally, and politically, in our communities as well as around the globe?  What challenges do women and girls across races, classes, religions, and cultures face in an increasingly

 globalizedworld?  Going forward, what might labor as a site of knowledge production further benefit our work and struggle in the human community?  What are some of the best practices?   

 

We welcome submissions for PANELS, POSTERS, ART DISPLAYS, AND SLIDE PRESENTATIONS

 

In keeping with the conference theme, suggested topics include, but are not limited to:

Women, Technology, & Labor                                       

Motherhood & Labor

Women & Labor Movements                                         

Working Women and Childcare/Elder Care

Sexism& Racism in Labor                                              

Single, Childless Women’s Labor

Women and Sex Labor                                                 

Women, Labor, & Heterosexist Privilege

Women & Child Labor                                                 

Women’s Labor & Leadership

Gender, Race, Class & Labor                                         

Women, Health, and Labor

Women’s Movements & Labor                                      

Ethnography & Women & Labor

21st Century Slavery                                                       

Women, Labor, Academe

Then and Now: Women and Labor                               

Women’s Labor and the Arab Awakening

Women, Community, & Labor                                      

Women and Care Economy

Indigenous Women and Labor                                       

Women & Domestic Labor                   

Women & Emotional/Care Work                                  

Women and Unions

Women, Labor, and Resistance                                       

Women and Volunteerism

Women, Immigration, Labor                                         

Women’s Labor in Fashion Industries

Labor and Violence against Women                                 

Women & Food Production/Industries  

Women and Unemployment                                          

Girls, Young Women and Labor Market

Wage Gap and Glass Ceiling                                          

Women, Labor, and Artistic Expression

Women, Labor, Incarceration                                         

Women’s Labor across/between Worlds

 

We also invite your ideas and suggestions.  Conference sessions will juxtapose cultural, generational, and geopolitical perspectives for the collective re-examination of narratives on women and labor.  Expect serious fun through meals and performance, with women, girls and their allies speaking of their struggles and power.

 

 

Submission Deadline: Postmarked by December 1, 2011

 

Please submit proposals and supporting materials to:

 

Women’s Studies Conference Committee

Women’s Studies Program, EN B 229

Southern Connecticut State University

501 Crescent Street

New Haven, CT 06515

 

Or via E-mail to:

 

womenstudies@southernct.edu, with attention to Conference Committee.  If you have any questions, please call the Women’s Studies office at (203) 392-6133.

Please include name, affiliation, E-mail, standard mailing address, and phone number. Proposals should be no longer than one page, with a second page for identification information. Panel Proposals are welcome.

 

The Annual Women’s Studies Conference at SCSU is self-supporting; all presenters can pre-register at the discounted presenter’s fee.  The fee includes all costs for supporting materials, entrance to keynote events, and all meals and beverage breaks. 

 

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