Volume 36, Issue 3, July 2010
Sonya Charles
Pages 409-428
DOI: 10.5840/soctheorpract201036322
How Should Feminist Autonomy Theorists Respond to the Problem of Internalized Oppression?
Cited by
- Anna Alichniewicz, Monika Michałowska. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy. Challenges to ART market: a Polish case 2015. [CrossRef]
- Nabina Liebow. Hypatia. Internalized Oppression and Its Varied Moral Harms: Self‐Perceptions of Reduced Agency and Criminality 2016. [CrossRef]
- Suzy Killmister. Res Publica. Autonomy, Liberalism, and Anti-Perfectionism 2013. [CrossRef]
- Elmar Unnsteinsson. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly. Silencing without Convention 2019. [CrossRef]
- Rebekah Johnston. Hypatia. Personal Autonomy, Social Identity, and Oppressive Social Contexts 2017. [CrossRef]
- Anna Alichniewicz, Monika Michalowska. Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy. “The angel of the house” in the realm of ART: feminist approach to oocyte and spare embryo donation for research 2014. [CrossRef]
- Kathryn MacKay. Journal of Social Philosophy. Authenticity and Normative Authority: Addressing the Agency Dilemma with Values of One’s Own 2020. [CrossRef]
- Milijana Đerić. Theories of the Self and Autonomy in Medical Ethics 2020: 17. [CrossRef]
- Laura Pritchard-Jones. Health Care Analysis. Ageism and Autonomy in Health Care: Explorations Through a Relational Lens 2017. [CrossRef]
- Elizabeth Sperry. Hypatia. Dupes of Patriarchy: Feminist Strong Substantive Autonomy's Epistemological Weaknesses 2013. [CrossRef]