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Feminist political economies of care: Young people, masculinities and de-industrialisation in a former shipbuilding community

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  • Anoop Nayak

Abstract

The paper explores how ideas of masculinity are currently configured in a former shipbuilding community. Derived from ethnographic research with 120 young people from three schools, the study makes a critical intervention into gender and work through a focus on masculinities and economies of caregiving. The paper contributes to emerging work on gender, work and care in four ways. First, highlighting a contingent relationship between local political economy, place and the production of masculinities. Second, demonstrating how the inclusion of young people’s perspectives and experiences of male caregiving extends existing feminist care geographies. Third, by exploring how care is gendered, ‘regendered’ and ‘degendered’ in young people’s accounts, prising open possibilities for ‘undoing’ patriarchal masculinities and reworking the gender order. Finally, it is argued that such practices may inspire new economic ontologies of care, pluralise masculinity and enhance the transformation of gender relations at local and global scales.

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  • Anoop Nayak, 2024. "Feminist political economies of care: Young people, masculinities and de-industrialisation in a former shipbuilding community," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 56(6), pages 1632-1650, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envira:v:56:y:2024:i:6:p:1632-1650
    DOI: 10.1177/0308518X241226888
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. John Tomaney & Andy Pike & James Cornford, 1999. "Plant Closure and the Local Economy: The Case of Swan Hunter on Tyneside," Regional Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 33(5), pages 401-411.
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