The books in this series ask where gender is in the events, interactions, and structures of global politics. Individually, they show that studying gender adds theoretical and explanatory richness to theorizing. Collectively, they demonstrate that gender-inclusive feminist work is an essential research program with which scholars, students, and practitioners of global politics should engage, and that research on gender(s) and sexualities is key to complete understandings of a variety of global political phenomena.
Rather than just looking at gender as related to "women's issues" in global politics, this series combines theoretical and empirical analyses to challenge all International Relations (IR) scholars to take account of gender across the subject matters in global politics and policy-makers to make better policy by noticing the gender-differential impacts of supposedly "neutral" policies.
The series includes and encourages work addressing genders and sexualities across disciplines that address global politics, including but not limited to political theory, comparative politics, political economy, security, environmental politics, foreign policy analysis, development studies, decolonial studies, and international political sociology.
Series Editors: J. Ann Tickner, American University and Laura Sjoberg, Royal Holloway University of London