Book contents
- Intersectional Advocacy
- Cambridge Studies in Gender and Politics
- Intersectional Advocacy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Movements to End Gender-Based Violence and Rethinking Feminist Advocacy
- 1 Theory of Intersectional Advocacy
- 2 Setting the Policy Boundaries of the Violence Against Women Act
- 3 Reconfiguring the Violence Against Women Act
- 4 Policy Linkages and Organizational Strategy
- 5 Intersectional Advocates and Organizations
- 6 Mobilization and Intersectional Advocacy
- 7 The Challenges and Possibilities Ahead
- Book part
- References
- Index
5 - Intersectional Advocates and Organizations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2024
- Intersectional Advocacy
- Cambridge Studies in Gender and Politics
- Intersectional Advocacy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Movements to End Gender-Based Violence and Rethinking Feminist Advocacy
- 1 Theory of Intersectional Advocacy
- 2 Setting the Policy Boundaries of the Violence Against Women Act
- 3 Reconfiguring the Violence Against Women Act
- 4 Policy Linkages and Organizational Strategy
- 5 Intersectional Advocates and Organizations
- 6 Mobilization and Intersectional Advocacy
- 7 The Challenges and Possibilities Ahead
- Book part
- References
- Index
Summary
What explains why these groups take on the practice of intersectional advocacy? In Chapter 5, this question is answered from an organizational perspective. Drawing again from the qualitative analysis of interviews with organizational leaders, the chapter presents the features of organizations that practice intersectional advocacy. There are four constitutive features of their organizations that were related to their engagement in intersectional advocacy. Despite a commitment to intersectional feminism, one of these organizations did not have all of these features and it also did not fully participate in intersectional advocacy. By discussing this case, the chapter demonstrates how an analysis of the four organizational features also help identify why groups such as these do not fully take on this practice. It then ends with how organizations with commitments to intersectionally marginalized groups but have not actualized them through intersectional advocacy, can change their varying organizational structures to take on this approach. This chapter is written in a way that scholars and organizational practitioners can both understand and appreciate the practice of intersectional advocacy.
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- Intersectional AdvocacyRedrawing Policy Boundaries Around Gender, Race, and Class, pp. 134 - 178Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024