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Call for Papers: Gendered food practices from seed to waste

Originally posted on Rural Sociology Wageningen University: Call for papers for the Yearbook of Women’s History (2016) Pastoralist women at traditional food fair in Gujarat, India  (photo credit: MARAG) ? Gendered food practices from seed to waste Guest editors: Bettina Bock and Jessica Duncan About the Yearbook The Yearbook of Women’s History is a peer-reviewed…

FoodGovernance's avatarRural Sociology Wageningen University

Call for papers for the Yearbook of Women’s History (2016)

Traditional food festival Pastoralist women at traditional food fair in Gujarat, India  (photo credit: MARAG)

Gendered food practices from seed to waste
Guest editors: Bettina Bock and Jessica Duncan

About the Yearbook

The Yearbook of Women’s History is a peer-reviewed academic annual covering all aspects of gender connected with historical research throughout the world. It has a respectable history in itself, reporting on issues concerning women and gender for 35 years. The Yearbook has addressed topics such as women and crime, women and war, and gender, ethnicity and (post)colonialism. Overtime the Yearbook has shifted focus from purely historical analysis to a broader historical and gender analysis, focused on women’s and men’s roles in society. By focusing on specific themes, the Yearbook aspires that each issue crosses cultures and historical time periods, while offering readers the opportunity to compare perspectives within each volume. There…

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