AlbeldaRandy. 1985. “Nice work if you can get it”: Segmentation of white and black women workers in the post-war period. Review of Radical Political Economics17 (3): 72–85.
2.
ChatzidakisAndreasHakimJamieLitterJoRottenbergCatherine. 2020. The Care Manifesto: The Politics of Interdependence. New York: Verso.
3.
CherryRobert. 1991. Struggles against patriarchy and Jim Crow: Their incompatibility with corporate profitability. Review of Radical Political Economics23 (1–2): 87–94.
4.
ChibberVivekVenezianiRoberto. 2021. The different facets of injustice: A critique of Nancy Folbre’s “Manifold Exploitations.”Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics14 (2): 170–84.
5.
CohenJennifer. 2018. What’s “radical” about [feminist] radical political economy?Review of Radical Political Economics50 (4): 716–26.
6.
CollinsPatricia Hill. 1990. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment. New York: Routledge.
7.
CollinsPatricia Hill. 2019. Intersectionality as Critical Social Theory. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
8.
CrenshawKimberlé1990. Mapping the margins: Intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color. Stanford Law Review43: 1241–99.
DarityWilliam A.Jr.2022. Position and possessions: Stratification economics and intergroup inequality. Journal of Economic Literature60 (2): 400–26.
11.
FedericiSylvia. 2004. Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body, and Primitive Accumulation. New York: Autonomedia.
12.
FergusonAnnFolbreNancy. 1981. The unhappy marriage of capitalism and patriarchy. In Women and Revolution, ed. SargentLydia, 313–38. Boston: South End Press.
13.
FolbreNancy. 2014. Comments on Tom Weisskopf’s David Gordon Memorial Lecture. Review of Radical Political Economics46 (4): 448–50.
14.
FolbreNancy. 2021a. Toward a more careful future: Thoughts on The Care Manifesto. Social Politics28 (4): 849–53.
15.
FolbreNancy. 2021b. The Rise and Decline of Patriarchal Systems: An Intersectional Political Economy. New York: Verso.
16.
FrankAndre Gunder. 1967. Capitalism and Underdevelopment in Latin America. New York: Monthly Review Press.
GlennEvelyn Nakano. 1985. Racial ethnic women’s labor: The intersection of race, gender, and class oppression. Review of Radical Political Economics17 (3): 86–108.
19.
GoldbergMichelle. 2009. The Means of Reproduction. Sex, Power, and the Future of the World. New York: Penguin.
20.
GottliebRhonda. 1984. The political economy of sexuality. Review of Radical Political Economics16 (1): 143–65.
21.
HartmannHeidi I.1979. The unhappy marriage of Marxism and feminism: Towards a more progressive union. Capital & Class3 (2): 1–33.
22.
KimMarlene. 2018. URPE at fifty: Reflections on a half-century of activism, community, debate (and a few crazy moments). Review of Radical Political Economics50 (3): 468–86.
23.
MatthaeiJulie. 1995. The sexual division of labor, sexuality, and lesbian/gay liberation: Toward a Marxist-feminist analysis of sexuality in US capitalism. Review of Radical Political Economics27 (2): 1–37.
24.
MoosKatherine A.2021. The historical evolution of the cost of social reproduction in the United States, 1959–2012. Review of Social Economy79 (1): 51–75.
25.
NguyenDuc Hien. 2023. The political economy of heteronormativity. Review of Radical Political Economics55 (1): 112–131.
26.
RobinsonCedric J.2005. Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition, revised and updated third edition. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina.
27.
RomeroMary. 2017. Introducing Intersectionality. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
28.
WaltersSuzanna Danuta. 2018. In defense of identity politics. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society43 (2): 473–88.
29.
WilliamsRhonda M.1987. Capital, competition, and discrimination: A reconsideration of racial earnings inequality. Review of Radical Political Economics19 (2): 1–15.
30.
WrightEric Olin. 1968. Contradictory class locations. New Left Review98: 3–42.