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Gender and Convention Theory

  • Universität Luzern
  • University of Lille

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Economics and sociology of conventions (EC/SC), also known as convention theory, offers a theo-retical framework centered on orders of worth and justifications. While EC/SC has been applied across various fields and empirical phenomena, it was rarely used to analyze gender until the early 2000s. This chapter introduces EC/SC as a valuable perspective for examining gender issues and outlines three manners of discussing gender within the framework: (1) Luc Boltanski contributed early on to the analysis of gender-sensitive topics, even if his reflections on gender and gender ine-qualities have been criticized by feminists. (2) In the early 2000s, French scholars independently developed, as a first manner, gender and family conventions. The lines of inquiry were consolidated and advanced by Olivier Thévenon. Nearly a decade later, Lisa Knoll proposed a second approach, which remains closer to Boltanski and Thévenot’s “orders of worth”. (3) In parallel to the theoreti-cal developments, various scholars have applied EC/SC, mainly “orders of worth”, to gender issues in the fields of education and training, labor and employment, entrepreneurship, family, sports, and public space.
Translated title of the contributionGeschlecht und Konventionentheorie
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationHandbook of Economics and Sociology of Conventions
EditorsRainer Diaz-Bone, Guillemette De Larquier
PublisherSpringer Nature Switzerland Cham
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

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