Women are working internationally to build a world based on gender equality and justice. Their concerns are shaped by conditions in their own countries and regions, and also by conditions for women in other parts of the world. Links forged by globalization, international relations, United Nations gender equality and development programs, and women's nongovernmental organizations connect their futures. This groundbreaking reference set documents the achievements and current challenges for all women, providing distortion-free and newly available information about women's status, in matters from education to violence, in more than 130 countries in the world's most populated areas.
Written by an international host of contributing specialists, this set is accessible to high school students and above. Its consistent narrative coverage and relevant statistics are ideal for research and comparisons. Readers will find that conceptions of women's issues vary by country as the set illuminates diverse perspectives and contemporary practices that shape the variations in equality and well-being among women. Judicious inclusion of historical processes helps frame the issues in a holistic perspective. Volume maps, individual country maps, tables, photos, and indexes by set and volume are also included.
About the Author: LYNN WALTER is Professor of Social Change and Development and Women's Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay.
MANISHA DESAI is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York.
CHERYL KALNY is Visiting Assistant Professor of History at St. Norbert College, De Pere, Wisconsin.
AMY LIND is Assistant Professor of Women's Studies at Arizona State University, Tempe. Her research has focused on gender, development, and women's political participation in Latin America, particularly in Ecuador, Bolivia, and Peru.
BAHIRA SHERIF-TRASK is Associate Professor of Individual and Family Studies at the University of Delaware, Newark.
AILI MARI TRIPP is Associate Professor of Political Science and Women's Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.