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   |    Lind, Amy.  Gendered paradoxes: women's movements, state restructuring, and global development in Ecuador.     							Pennsylvania State, 2005. 182p bibl  index  afp ISBN 0-271-02544-1, $55.00  								.   							    							Reviewed in 2006may CHOICE. Lind (women and gender studies, Univ. of Virginia) begins by correctly  noting that while studies of Ecuador's strong social movements have  focused a good deal of attention on indigenous actors, scholars have  slighted the roles of women. Nevertheless, much like indigenous  peoples, women confronted the 1980s debt crisis and similarly became  significant new political actors in the struggle against neoliberal  economic policies. Over the past 25 years, these policies have hit  women particularly hard and exacerbated gender inequalities. Lind  argues that women's interests are best served by directly challenging  existing development strategies and forwarding concrete alternatives.  By introducing gender, the author provides an important corrective to  understanding how social movements engage, negotiate, and challenge  government policies. She excels at painting a big picture of  understanding the role of gender in nongovernmental organizations,  globalization, and development policies. While those interested in  women's studies will want to read this book, its message is perhaps  more urgent for those who do not typically study gender, in order to  understand better how it interacts with race and class to foster  systems of domination. Summing Up: Highly recommended.  Upper-division undergraduates and above.  							 -- M. Becker, Truman State University 
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