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Exam (elaborations)

Feminist views on social inequality

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Extremely detailed essay plan on Feminist views on social inequality. Includes introduction, conclusion, key theorists, explanations and evaluations. Earned an A* overall and above 90% in all class tests.









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Uploaded on
November 11, 2025
Number of pages
3
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

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Feminist views on social inequality:

Intro:
 Feminists have debated between themselves about the significance
of gender inequality and the route that should be followed to create
equality between the genders
 All feminists agree the problem for women in society is structural -
society is patriarchal, feminism is a conflict theory because men and
women struggle for power

Point 1: Walby Triple Systems Theory
AO2:
 She argues society maintains patriarchy, capitalism and racism,
therefore the arguments of biological theories of patriarchy are
weakened
 Women are often segregated into lower-paid, lower-status jobs. The
labour market is gendered, with men dominating the top positions.
Women often face a “glass ceiling” - invisible barriers to promotion
 Capitalism and patriarchy work together to exploit women
economically - they are cheap labour and often do unpaid work at
home too
 Women do the majority of domestic labour - cleaning, childcare,
cooking - often unpaid and undervalued. Men benefit from this, as it
supports their paid work and comfort at home
 Walby sees the home as a key site of patriarchal control, where
women are expected to care for others, often at the expense of their
own independence
 Institutions like the law, education, and politics often reinforce male
power. For example, legal systems have historically failed to protect
women from domestic abuse or sexual violence, women are
underrepresented in political positions of power
 The state helps to maintain male dominance by failing to challenge
to actively supporting gender inequalities
AO3:
 However, Functionalist biological theories of male dominance would
criticise this view
 Parsons’ sex role theory

Point 2: Liberal Feminism
AO2:
 First Wave (1870s-1920s) - lack of political rights/voting rights
prompt the suffrage movement among women
 Second Wave (1960s-1970s) - Liberal Feminism demands access to
contraception, abortion, employment and educational equality
 March of progress: legislation (Reformists)
 Changing education/attitudes: GIST+WISE (Sue Sharpe)
 Oakley: manipulation/canalisation - norms and values according to
gender: reinforces gender stereotypes to address socialisation
 He For She campaign: Emma Watson/no misogyny
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