<p>Foreword: Raewyn Connell <br/>Introduction: Dilemmas, Dialogues, Debates; Wendy Harcourt</p><p>Section I: Gender, Power, Decoloniality<br/>1. The Coloniality of Gender; Maria Lugones<br/>2. On Gender and its Otherwise; Catherine Walsh<br/>3. Gender and Equivocation: Notes on Decolonial Feminist Translations; Claudia de Lima Costa<br/>4. The Coloniality of Gender as a Radical Critique of Developmentalism; Rosalba Icaza and Rolando Vázquez </p><p>Section II: Institutions, Policies, Governmentality<br/>1. Mainstreaming Gender or 'Streaming' Gender Away: Feminists Marooned in the Development Business, Maitrayee Mukhopadhyay <br/>2. Mainstream(ing) Has Never Run Clean, Perhaps Never Can: Gender in the Main/Stream of Development; Sara de Jong<br/>3. Beyond Binaries: Strategies for a 21st Century Gender Equality Agenda; Aruna Rao and Joanne Sandler<br/>4. Gender Mainstreaming: Views of a Post-Beijing Feminist; Anouka van Eerdewijk <br/>5. Mainstreaming Gender or Streaming Gender Away Revisited; Maitrayee Mukhopadhyay</p><p>Section III: Globalization, Care, Economic Justice<br/>1. Revisiting the Core Text: Gendered Well-being. Globalization, Women's Health, and Economic Justice: Reflections Post-September 11; Rosalind Petchesky <br/>2. Reclaiming Gender and Economic Justice in the Era of Corporate Takeover; Alexandra Garita <br/>3. Rethinking Care and Economic Justice with Third World Sex Workers; Debolina Dutta <br/>4. 'This Solidarity of Sisters'; Rosalind Petchesky</p>Section IV: Gender, Science, Ecology<br/>1. Rooted Networks, Webs of Relation, and the Power of Situated Science Bringing the Models Back down to Earth in Zambrana; Dianne Rocheleau<br/>2. Being and Knowing Differently In Living Worlds: Rooted Networks and Relational Webs in Indigenous Geographies; Padini Nirmal<br/>3. Responding to Technologies of 'Fixing' 'Nuisance' Webs of Relation in the Mozambican Woodlands; Ingrid L. Nelson<br/>4. Dianne Rocheleau: The Feminist Political Ecology Legacy and beyond; Lyla Mehta<br/>5. Crossing Boundaries: Points of Encounter with People and Worlds 'Otherwise'; Dianne Rocheleau</p><p>Section V: Livelihoods, Place, Community<br/>1. Building Community Economies: Women and the Politics of Place; JK Gibson-Graham <br/>2. Seeing Diversity, Multiplying Possibility: My Journey from Post-Feminism to Post-Development with JK Gibson-Graham; Kelly Dombroski<br/>3. Retooling our Political Imaginations through a Feminist Politics of Economic Difference; Michal Osterweil <br/>4. Cuban 'Co-ops' and Wanigela 'wantoks': Engaging with Diverse Economic Practices; Yvonne Underhill-Sem<br/>5. 'Optimism', Place and the Possibility of Transformative Politics; JK Gibson Graham</p><p>Section VI: Gender, Race, Intersectionality<br/>1. Power, Intersectionality and the Politics of Belonging; Nira Yuval Davis <br/>2. Towards an Ethics of Care: Response to 'Power, Intersectionality and the Politics of Belonging'; Aili Mari Tripp <br/>3. Toward a Broader Scope and More Critical Frame for Intersectional Analysis; Susan Paulson<br/>4. Murals and Mirrors: Imprisoned Women and the Politics of Belonging; Marisa Belausteguigoitia-Rius<br/>5. A Dialogical Conversation: Response to the Responses; Nira Yuval Davis</p><p>Section VII: Violence, Militarism, Conflict<br/>1. Gendering Insecurities, Informalization and 'War Economies; V. Spike Peterson <br/>2.Gendered and Racialised Logics of Insecurity, Development, and Intervention; Maryam Khalid<br/>3. Economies of Conflict: Reflecting on the (Re)Production of 'War Economies'; Heather Turcotte<br/>4. Effects and Affects: Women in the Post-Conflict Moment in Timor-Leste: An Application of Spike Peterson's 'Gendering Insecurities, Informalization and War Economies'; Sara Niner <br/>5. Situating, Reflecting, Appreciating; V. Spike Peterson</p><p>Section VIII: Bodies, Sexuality, Queering Development<br/>1. Revisiting the Core Text: Sexuality and the Development Industry; Andrea Cornwall and Susie Jolly<br/>2. Redressing the Silofication Between Sexuality and Development: A Radical Revisioning; Stella Nyanzi<br/>3. Puhngah/Men In Skirts: A Plea for History; Andil Gosine<br/>4. Pink Space and the Pleasure Approach to Sexuality and the Development Industry in China; Xiapei He<br/>5. Sexuality and the development industry: Reflections 6 years on; Andrea Cornwall and Susie Jolly</p><p>Section IX: Visions, Hopes, Futures<br/>1. Feminism as Transformational Politics: Towards Possibilities for Another World;Peggy Antrobus<br/>2. Hopes and the Struggles for Transformation: Reflections of an Iranian Feminist; Mansoureh Shoajee<br/>3. The Future for Women's Struggle for Social Justice and Full Citizenship: A Comprehensive Peace; Shobha Raghuram<br/>4. Imagining Feminist Futures; Wendy Harcourt<br/>5. Further Reflections; Peggy Antrobus<br/></p>