The study focuses on what Taylor calls «
gendered social exclusion,» behavior that would tend to make «token» women or men feel excluded from a group of mostly opposite - sex coworkers.
Its proponents claim that the tradition is dominated by patriarchy and
exclusion, the product of oppressive forces linked to geographical location,
social class, race, and
gender.
Her reporting shows that
gender inequality has much wider consequences than some might think: «Gender inequality fuels social instability, crime, and local conflict [and] women's subordination is substantially enforced by their exclusion from the money system.&
gender inequality has much wider consequences than some might think: «
Gender inequality fuels social instability, crime, and local conflict [and] women's subordination is substantially enforced by their exclusion from the money system.&
Gender inequality fuels
social instability, crime, and local conflict [and] women's subordination is substantially enforced by their
exclusion from the money system.»