Degree | Type | Year |
---|---|---|
Sociocultural Gender Studies | OB | 2 |
You can view this information at the end of this document.
No prerequisits
- Understand capitalist, patriarchal and colonial domination structures and their evolution
- Understanding the stratification of society according to gender, class, race, sexuality and more through intersectionality
- Know and know how to use the main theoretical contributions of feminism for the analysis of the social structure
- Develop critical skills and arguments for the analysis of social structure and the transformation of social inequalities
- Know how to build indicators to measure social inequalities
- The social structure and social inequalities from a gender perspective
- The division of labor: capitalism, colonialism and patriarchy
- Intersectionality and the axes of social inequality of gender, sexuality, social class, race, etc.
- The relationship between structure and action: evolutions, transformations and resistances
- Between the macro and the micro: inequal institutions, gender regimes and its reproduction
- Analysis of stratification and social mobility with a gender perspective
- Indicators to measure social inequalities
Title | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
Type: Directed | |||
Debates | 16 | 0.64 | SM35, SM40, SM35 |
Master classes | 40 | 1.6 | KM40, KM43, SM02, SM35, KM40 |
Type: Autonomous | |||
Group essays and seminars | 10 | 0.4 | CM23, SM35, SM37, SM38, SM40, CM23 |
Read literature | 24 | 0.96 | KM40, KM43, SM02, SM35, KM40 |
Master classes
Reading texts (in Spanish, Catalan and English)
Accompanying the reading of texts in the classroom through seminars
Classroom discussions through seminars
Support for the preparation of group work
Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.
Title | Weighting | Hours | ECTS | Learning Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Exam | 30% | 20 | 0.8 | KM40, KM43 |
Participation in class | 10% | 10 | 0.4 | CM23, KM43, SM02, SM35, SM38, SM40 |
Seminars | 30% | 20 | 0.8 | KM40, KM43, SM02, SM35 |
Work essay | 30% | 10 | 0.4 | CM24, SM37, SM38, SM40 |
Continuous evaluation
Attendance and active participation 10%
Group seminars 30%
Group essay 30%
Exam 30%
Unique evaluation
Exam 50%
Individual essay 50%
Note: A “Not assessable” grade will be given if no assessment activity has been submitted
AI: For this course, the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies is allowed exclusively for support tasks, such as text correction or translations.Students must clearly identify which parts have been generated using these technologies, specify the tools used, and include a criticalreflection on how these tools influenced both the process and the final outcome of the activity. Lack of transparency regarding the use of AI in this graded activity will be considered academic dishonesty and may result in partial or total loss of credit for the activity, or more serious sanctions in severe cases.
Acker, Joan (1992). From Sex Roles to Gendered Institutions, American Sociological Association 21(5), 565–569
Acker, Joan (2006). Inequality regimes: Gender, class, and race in organizations, Gender and Society, 20(4), 441–464.
Connell, R.W (2003) La organización social de la masculinidad ¿Todos los hombres son iguales?: identidades masculinas y cambios sociales / coord. por Carlos Lomas García, 2003, ISBN 84-493-1460-7
Connell, R.W. (2004) Gender and Power: Society, the Person and Sexual Politics. 2 nd edition. Stanford: Stanford University Press
Crenshaw, Kimberle (1989) “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics”. The University of Chicago
Delphy, Christine (1985) El enemigo principal. El enemigo principal y otros textos. Barcelona: LaSal
De Miguel Álvarez, Ana (2005) La articulación clásica del feminismo y el socialismo: el conflicto clase-género, Teoría feminista: de la ilustración a la globalización, de Miguel Álvarez, A. y Celia Amorós Puente, C. (Coord.) Vol. 1, págs. 295-332.
Fausto-Sterling, Anne (2006). Duelo a los dualismos, a: Cuerpos sexuados. Barcelona: Melusina. P. 15-46. 2000.
Florio, Eleonora, Caso, Letizia; Castelli, Ilaria (2020) The Adultcentrism Scale in the educational relationship: Instrument development and preliminary validation. New Ideas in Psychology, Vol. 57.
Hagan, J., Simpson, J. H., & Gillis, A. R. (1979). The Sexual Stratification of Social Control: A Gender-Based Perspective on Crime and Delinquency. The British Journal of Sociology, 30(1), 25–38. https://doi.org/10.2307/589499
Lutz, H., Vivar, M.T.H., & Supik, L. (Eds.). (2011). Framing Intersectionality: Debates on a Multi-Faceted Concept in Gender Studies (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315582924
Mergaert, Lut i Lombardo, Emanuela (2014). ‘Resistance to implementing gender mainstreaming in EU research policy’, in: Weiner, Elaine and Heather MacRae (eds): ‘The persistent invisibility of gender in EU policy’ European Integration online Papers (EIoP), Special issue 1, 18, 1-21.
Pujal Llombart, M., & Amigot Leache, P. (2010). El binarismo de género como dispositivo de poder social, corporal y subjetivo. Quaderns De Psicologia, 12(2), 131–148. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/qpsicologia.770
Rico, M., Gómez-Limón, J.A., (2011) Propuesta metodológica para la construcción de indicadores sintéticos de igualdad de género. El caso del mediorural de Castilla y León, Vol 69, No 1
Rodó-Zárate, Maria (2017) “Interseccionalitat”, Ed. Tigre de Paper (llibre disponible en biblioteques i també disponible en castellà)
Rodó-Zárate, M., & Jorba, M. (2022). Metaphors of intersectionality: Reframing the debate with a new proposal. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 29(1), 23-38.
Verge, Tània i De La Fuente, Maria (2014). Playing with Different Cards: Party Politics, Gender Quotas and Women’sEmpowerment. International Political Science Review, 35(1),67–69.
West, Candace, & Zimmerman, Don H. (1987). Doing Gender, Gender and Society, 1(2), 125–151.
The Virtual Campus will be used to upload readings and assignments.
Please note that this information is provisional until 30 November 2025. You can check it through this link. To consult the language you will need to enter the CODE of the subject.
Name | Group | Language | Semester | Turn |
---|---|---|---|---|
(PAUL) Classroom practices | 1 | Spanish | first semester | morning-mixed |
(TE) Theory | 1 | Spanish | first semester | morning-mixed |