'This volume, edited and written by some of the best known international feminist sociologists, explores different situated contexts of women's citizenship in different societies. While emphasizing the shifting and contested nature of women's citizenship it also highlights the crucial importance of analyzing all citizenships in an intersectional way, in which the gendered nature of women's citizenship is mutually constituted in the concrete reality of everyday life experience with other intersected social power axes, such as class, race, ability, sexuality and stage in the life cycle. The book particularly highlights the exclusionary, as well as inclusionary and participatory character of citizenship constructions and how any valid analysis of women's citizenship has to be examined in local and global contexts relationally.' Nira Yuval-Davis, University of East London, UK 'Grounded and global, this collection concentrates on the citizenship struggles of women in five continents. Highlighting the structural constraints of neoliberalism and economic globalization on women, the essays feature different meanings and practices of citizenship in their presentation of everyday life experiences. This is an insightful volume that should be adopted in women's and gender studies, sociology, anthropology and international studies courses.' Rhacel Salazar Parrenas, Brown University, USA, and author of The Force of Domesticity: Filipina Migrants and Globalization '... an excellent resource for research and teaching, providing much needed empirical case studies alongside conceptual debates... I would encourage anyone interested in gender and citizenship to read this book... I highly recommend this book as a valuable resource providing empirically grounded analysis that can guide the development of further research.' European Journal of Women's Studies '... the value of this volume is in its expanse across many national contexts and social groups and scholarship within nations, but it is particularly successful through its consistent feminist theoretical outlook and the inclusion of original insights into women's struggles for citizenship. I recommend this as a valuable collection of research for scholars and students interested in the transformative impact of social activism and in the ongoing inquiry of how citizenship can be understood or claimed in the contemporary world... This type of theorised research on citizenship is often sadly lacking as a framework in third sector studies. The depth of theoretical analysis across all of the 12 chapters provides useful and well-analysed contexts that offer knowledge about the third sector and its role in struggles for women's citizenship and equality.' Voluntas 'This edited book addresses the citizenship issues and experiences of immigrant and minority women around the world. The four editors of this impressive volume combine their talents, noting the fluidity of the term citizenship and the plethora of variables and inequalities of globalisation.' Political Studies Review