Category Archives: Monographs

Adolf Tobeña – Unequals

Unequals               Some prominent words enclose and spread a myth, while carrying a great potential for confusion. “Equality” is one of them. Its pedigree and status at the ladder of political values is incontestable, especially since the Enlightenment elevated it to the Trinity of republican principles, as one of […]

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Benjamin Hine

Challenging the Gendered Discourse of Domestic Violence: Comments on the Istanbul Convention   The Istanbul Convention (Council of Europe, 2017) is arguably a landmark policy, designed to tackle domestic violence across the continent. At present this has been signed by 44 members of the European Council, and has subsequently been ratified in 22 of those […]

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Steve Stewart-Williams

The Science of Human Sex Differences: Implications for Policy on Gender Equity     Gender equity is one of the most widely discussed and hotly contested political issues of our time. Of the many topics which fall under the gender equity banner, three have attracted the lion’s share of attention. First, men are overrepresented in […]

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Claire Lehmann

Stress and the Paradox of Female Happiness     Since the 1960s women have entered the workforce and have achieved financial independence. It has become socially acceptable to leave unhappy marriages. Through careers, women gain status and enjoy intellectual fulfilment and have less pressure on them to conform to narrow stereotypes of what it means to be a […]

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Adolf Tobeña

Feminine and masculine brains: from talents to pugnacity styles     The most common notion about gender hiatuses today is that cognitive differences between women and men are minimal and superfluous. Women’s entry into all spheres of professional activity has been so comprehensive and formidable that it is difficult to avoid that certainty. The prospect […]

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