Vol. 67 No. 1, September - September 2013
Index
- Editors' foreword.
- Placing gender on the agenda of international affairs: changing conceptual and institutional landscapes.
- Gender pay equity in advanced countries: the role of parenthood and policies.
- From women in transport to gender in transport: challenging conceptual frameworks for improved policymaking.
- Global women's work: historical perspectives on the textile and garment industries.
- Ethnic diversity, gender, and national leaders.
- Towards a new transformative development agenda: the role of men and boys in achieving gender equality.
- Support versus transformation in development financing: what works to close gender gaps?
- Enhancing poor rural women's land rights in the developing world.
- Gender and new wars.
- Inclusive security, lasting peace: an interview with Ambassador Swanee Hunt.
- Is Yemen a new model? An interview with Jamal Benomar.
- Congo: no peace without women: an interview with Denis Mukwege.
- Sexual assault: a stain on the U.S. military: an interview with Amy Ziering.
- Rethinking manhood: an interview with Ted Bunch.
- Access for all: the future for Afghanistan: an interview with Shaharzad Akbar.
- Women and the "Third Way".
- The Burden of History: the Issue of 'Comfort Women' and What Japan Must Do to Move Forward.
- Girl Power in Japanese Boardrooms? An Exploratory Study of Critical Masses' Impact on Firm Financial Performance.
- A bright future for women in U.S. politics.
- Gender Jihad: the slow and steady gains of women in the Middle East.
- The End of Men and the Rise of Women.
- Women on Corporate Boards and in Top Management: European Trends and Policy.
- International Security and Gender.
- The Rise of Women: The Growing Gender Gap in Education and What it Means for American Schools.
- Beyond Feminism and Islamism: Gender and Equality in North Africa.
- Body as Evidence: Mediating Race, Globalizing Gender.
- Brutality and Desire: War and Sexuality in Europe's Twentieth Century.
- Do Babies Matter?: Gender and Family in the Ivory Tower.
- Indigenous Women and Work: from Labor to Activism.