Contact
Binghamton, NY 13902-6000
Ph. (607) 777-2815
Fx. (607) 777-4222
http://wstudies.binghamton.edu/ [1]
wstudies@binghamton.edu [2]
[3]
The Binghamton University's Women's Studies Department gives students the opportunity to tailor their studies toward issues of gender and intersections between race, class, and sexuality. Binghamton administers a minor and concentration in Women's Studies.
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Employment Opportunities
Principal Staff
Dr. Dara Silberstein, Executive DirectorE-mail: lael@binghamton.edu
Dr. Ingeborg Majer O'Sickey, Faculty Director
E-mail: imos@binghamton.edu
Donna Young Canfield, Program Secretary
E-mail: dcanfiel@binghamton.edu
Areas of Expertise:
Access & Disparities [4], Awareness & Education [5], Barriers & Opportunities [6], Human Rights & Security [7], Higher Education [8], Sexuality & Gender [9], Women in History [10], Women's Movements [11], Women's, Gender & Feminist Studies [12], Women's Networks [13]Member Experts:
Projects & Campaigns
# Feminist Thought and Scholarship
Transnational Feminisms. This symposium will focus on the formation of a complex weaving of feminisms(s) globally with special attention to the relationship between feminist movements and feminist theories and the "new world order," hence the current reconfiguration of economic, social, and political arrangements world-wide. The symposium also seeks to be self-reflexive and consequently to raise issues about the place of women's and/or gender studies in the weave. No one disciplinary perspective will be privileged at the symposium and we welcome contributions from outside of the academy. Among issues that could be addressed in the symposium are: identity; interactions between different social movements; gender or sexual preference based rights; cross border theoretical travels.
Feminism, Democracy, and the Changing World Order. The Women's Studies Department hosted an event addressing feminism, democracy, and the changing world order. Lectures and discussions were administered by the department.
Gender and Work Space(s) was a spring symposium, held April 14 and 15, 2000. It explored the relationship between gender, sexuality, and work; the multidimensionality of gender at work; gender and the cyber work space; gender, work, and the changing world order; and gender, work, and the state, among other topics.
Homeland Security: Feminist Critiques. Proposed for April 2003.
Reports & Resources
#Our Talk Newsletter [14]
Topics relevant to feminist scholarship and activisim are addressed in this newsletter.