Australian Feminist Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Australian Feminist Studies is 1. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-11-01 to 2024-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
Dead White men vs. Greta Thunberg: Nationalism, Misogyny, and Climate Change Denial in Swedish far-right Digital Media22
Feminist Infrastructure for Better Weathering10
Women’s Pathways to Digital Inclusion Through Digital Labour in Rural Farming Households9
The Neo-Malthusian Reflex in Climate Politics: Technocratic, Right Wing and Feminist References7
Towards an Inventive Ethics of Carefull Risk: Unsettling Research Through DIY Academic Archiving7
Removing the Mask: Trust, Privacy and Self-protection in Closed, Female-focused Facebook Groups7
Indigenous Internet Users: Learning to Trust Ourselves6
Greta Thunberg is ‘giving a face’ to Climate Activism: Confronting Anti-Feminist, Anti-Environmentalist, and Ableist Memes6
Smart Home Masculinities5
‘So, What is a Good Masculinity?’: Navigating Normativity in Violence Prevention with Men and Boys5
The Role of Housing Wealth in Young Adults’ Imagined Futures: Investor Subjectivities in the Minskian Household4
Introduction: Entanglements of Anti-Feminism and Anti-Environmentalism in the Far-Right4
Green or Gender-Modern Nativists: Do They Exist and Do They Vote for Right-Wing Populist Parties?4
Homelessness as a Feminist Issue: Revisiting the 1970s3
Teaching for Liberation: The Manifesto Assignment as an Example of bell hooks’ Engaged Pedagogy3
Making Rights and Realities: How Australian Human Rights Make Gender, Alcohol and Other Drugs2
Learning to Stand with Gyack: A Practice of Thinking with Non-Innocent Care2
Archives as Spaces of Radical Hospitality2
Mana Wahine and Mothering at the Loʻi: A Two-spirit/Queer Analysis2
A Climate of Misogyny: Gender, Politics of Ignorance, and Climate Change Denial – An Interview with Katharine Hayhoe2
The Use/Less Citations in Feminist Research2
Mistrust of the City at Night: Networked Connectivity and Embodied Perceptions of Risk and Safety2
Remaking Home: Creative Practice as Part of Domesticity’s Changing Significance1
Feminist Research Ethics and First Nations Women’s Life Narratives: A Conversation1
Beyond Consent: Exploring Bi+ People’s Experiences of Negotiating Sex Through a Queer Phenomenological Framework1
Janet Frame’s Autobiographical Frock Consciousness1
Beyond Formal Ethics Reviews: Reframing the Potential Harms of Sexual Violence Research1
Commodity Feminism and Dressing the ‘Best Self’ onA Practical Wedding1
Disrupting the Architectural Line: Wandering Domestic Objects in Public Spaces1
Domus, Dream, Domicide: Home as Limit Point in the Pyrocene Lessons from the ‘Black Summer’ Australian Bushfires1
Posters with Glitter Issues: Exploring Archival (W)holes at the Newberry Library1
Sharing the Wealth: Tax, Justice, Gender and Care1
Memories of Entanglement: Conflicts Around Sexuality at the Sydney Women’s Commission 19731
A Screen of One's Own: The Domestic Caregiver as Researcher During Covid-19, and Beyond1
‘Persistent’ Migrant Kitchens: Spatial Analogies and the Politics of Sharing1
Gender-Technology-Trust: Feminist Reflections on Mobile and Social Media Practices1
Mapping Relational Intensities and Care in the COVID-19 Pandemic Home: Understanding Carers’ Practices Through Cultural Probes1
‘There’s Nothing Clinical About It’: LGBT Health and the Atmosphere of the Clinic1
Interview with Sophie Dyring and Samantha Donnelly on A Design Guide for Older Women’s Housing1
Women in the Global Super Rich. An Analysis of the Forbes World’s Billionaires List, 2010–20231
Marriage Equality Blues: Method and Mess around the Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey1
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