
Playing the State
For some years feminists across the world have been gaining more of a foothold in national and local government, establishing the first 'femocracy'. Their presence has started an important debate about the rules, and feminist ethics, of engaging with the state. One of the best opportunities to evaluate the progress of this debate is in Australia, where feminists have occupied positions of relative bureaucratic power since the mid seventies. The Questions raised by these interventions provide the focus for this collection: What com-promises have to be made in the political arena, and what progress is possible? What relations can a femocracy have with grassroots feminisms, and how much of its power is derived from them?The first section, which challenges both Marxist and liberal accounts, suggests new ways of thinking about the state; examining the relationship of institutionalized feminism to a multicultural society. 'Official Feminism' is the subject of the second section, which includ