Feminist Next System Literature Review

Karin Schonpflug

Karin Schonpflug is an economist at the Austrian Ministry of Finance and also Lecturer at the University of Vienna, Austria.

Are there feminist, economic utopian visions amongst feminist economists? What are these visions? Is there a common vision for feminist economics or should there be? Can feminist economics be effective without a utopian vision? Comprehensive and original, this book surveys the entire field of utopian literature; from Plato to the present. Answering a range of questions and written by a rising star in feminist economics, it provides explanations of: the different kinds of feminism the evolution of feminist thought; the development of feminist economics; and, the history and sources of utopias as a theoretical and/or literary tool. 

Notes:

Critique of ecofeminismJournal Feminist Economics (1995-2002)Schonpflug looked for utopian themes in the journal for eight years. She categorized 240 articles into 12 issues (139-140):
  1. Welfare
  2. Childcare, housework, and caring labor
  3. Family planning
  4. Development
  5. Education
  6. Discrimination and affirmative action
  7. Pay equity and the (paid) labor market
  8. Poverty
  9. History of economic thought, neoclassical and heterodox economic theory
  10. Queer economics
  11. Theory of the family
  12. Race and class
She also grouped eight methodological approaches (140):
  1. Empirical - data collection and interpretation
  2. Modeling - creating a mathematical model to explain and predict
  3. Empiricist - add women and stir, critique of New Home Economics
  4. Feminist practice (qualitative)
  5. Critical - i.e. general critique of welfare reform
  6. Reflective - reflection on feminist economic theory
  7. Practical - offer practical solutions to problems
  8. Questioning Knowledge Production - hermeneutic, discourse analysis, which include the following:
    1. Constructive
    2. Deconstructive
      1. Rhetoric of economics approach
      2. Poststructuralist, postcolonial, and postmodern
      3. Utopian - creatively envisioning radical change
She found the most dominant issue was 9, an involvement with neoclassical and heterodox economic theory. The second highest is 7 on the labor market, equal pay, etc., followed by 2 on unpaid labor in the household, care, and childcare (2008: 141). The issues with the fewest occurrences are numbers 3 (family planning) and 6 (discrimination and affirmative action). The third issue with fewest occurrences is 10, queer economics. See Figure 6.1.

She also found that the critical approach was the most commonly applied, followed by the empirical, and reflective feminist approach (2008: 141). The utopian approach was used less than any other, followed by the practical. However, the utopian approach was used most in discussing economic theory (issue 9) and unpaid work in the home (issue 2). See Figure 6.2.

Alternative feminist theorists according to Schonpflug include:
Drucilla Barker
Michele Pujol
Nancy Folbre  
Genevieve Vaughan


 

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