Stanford Social Innovation Review (SSIR)
This five-part series with the Stanford Social Innovation Review [...]
This five-part series with the Stanford Social Innovation Review [...]
Sarah Kaplan reviews C.J. Janovy's book, "No Place Like Home: Lessons from Activism in LGBT Kansas," for Stanford Social Innovation Review (SSIR).
Associate Director, Alyson Colón reviews "Equality for Women = Prosperity for All" for the Stanford Social Innovation Review (SSIR).
In every country around the world, women spend more time on household responsibilities than men. Research shows that gender norms contribute not only to greater expectations of women at home but also impact their ability to take advantage of family-friendly policies at work. Learn more in this explainer.
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Rachael Goodman & Sarah Kaplan discuss how gender-diverse people face different kinds of economic inclusion and exclusion than other marginalized groups. (Part 5 in a 5-part series with SSIR).
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Rachael Goodman & Sarah Kaplan discuss how extended families can actually enable women to take on paying jobs outside the home (Part 4 in a 5-part series with SSIR).
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Laura Doering & Sarah Kaplan argue that the actual impacts of development policies aimed at improving women's lives happen in day-to-day interactions (Part 3 of a 5-part series with SSIR)
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Sarah Kaplan and GATE post doc Rachael Goodman write about how the mantra of meritocracy is being exported around the world. (Part 2 of a 5-part series with SSIR.)
Stanford Social Innovation Review
Sarah Kaplan and GATE post doc Rachael Goodman write about improving the effectiveness of women's empowerment programs by involving men. (Part 1 of a 5-part series with SSIR.)