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This book brings together a wide selection of viewpoints on what is happening to relations between the sexes and the sexual division of labor in contemporary society. The contributors look at the ways in which gender relationships are changing, the consequences of these changes for family life and society generally, and the part the state should play in future developments. Rewriting the Sexual Contract encompasses the views of people with widely differing orientations, stretching across the moral and political spectrum. The contributors provide varied interpretations of what the recent sexual revolution means and where it may be leading us. The questions discussed include: Are the life-styles of men and women converging or polarizing? Do men and women place the same value on family life? Do most mothers want to work full-time while their children are young? Are families strengthened by a sense of differentiation and interdependence between the sexes? Does social policy need to recognize sexual differences in order to maximize social equality?The contributors represent a wide range of viewpoints, but are all involved in analyzing and influencing public attitudes in this area. They include Carole Pateman, Roger Scruton, Ruth Lister, Fay Weldon, Michael Young, and Barbara Cartland, among others. Rewriting the Sexual Contract examines issues pertinent to the current social and political culture and will be of interest to sociologists, gender studies scholars, and political theorists.Geoff Dench is a senior research fellow at the Institute of Community Studies and a visiting professor at Middlesex University. He is the author of Transforming Men and Minorities in the Open Society: Prisoners of Ambivalence.
List of contents
1: Introduction Women and Disability: The Double Handicap; 2: Disabled Women: Sexism without the Pedestal; 3: The Invisible Isolation of Deaf Women: Its Effect on Social Awareness; 4: Multiple Minority Groups: A Case Study of Physically Disabled Women; 5: Sex Role Attitudes and Role Reorganization in Spinal Cord Injured Women; 6: Benefits for the Disabled: How Beneficial for Women?; 7: Assertiveness Training for Women with Visual Impairments; 8: A Peer Counseling Training Program for Disabled Women: A Tool for Social and Individual Change; 9: Women and Chronic Renal Failure: Some Neglected Issues; 10: Toward a Model of Factors Influencing the Hiring of Women with a History of Breast Cancer; 11: Like Other Women: Perspectives of Mothers with Physical Disabilities
About the author
Mary Jo Deegan
Summary
The special needs of women with disabilities have been disregarded in a wide variety of vital areas. Issues pertain to women as wives and mothers. Studies of the effects on female sexuality of such conditions as renal disease and diabetes are lacking, though the sexual functioning of men with these diseases has been researched. On the economic front, the Federal-State Vocational Rehabilitation system and the regulations concerning disability benefits under Social Security provide less adequately for women than for men. Hopefully, this volume will raise the consciousness of its readers to the special status of women with disabilities as a minority group experiences multiple sources of discriminations.