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Matrix of domination

The matrix of domination or matrix of oppression is a sociological paradigm that explains issues of oppression that deal with race, class, and gender, which, though recognized as different social classifications, are all interconnected. Other forms of classification, such as sexual orientation, religion, or age, apply to this theory as well. Patricia Hill Collins is credited with introducing the theory in her work entitled Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment.[1] As the term implies, there are many different ways one might experience domination, facing many different challenges in which one obstacle, such as race, may overlap with other sociological features. Characteristics such as race, age, and sex, may intersectionally affect an individual in extremely different ways, in such simple cases as varying geography, socioeconomic status, or simply throughout time. Other scholars such as Kimberlé Crenshaw's Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color are credited with expanding Collins' work.[2] The matrix of domination is a way for people to acknowledge their privileges in society. How one is able to interact, what social groups one is in, and the networks one establishes is all based on different interconnected classifications.[3]

Theory applied Edit

Though Collins' main focus of the theory of the matrix of domination was applied to African-American women, there are many other examples that can be used to illustrate the theory. Other examples include Log Cabin Republicans,[4] female criminality,[5] and African-American Muslim women.[6] One of the key concepts of the matrix of domination is that the different categories, like race and gender, are separate groups, rather than a combination. This is a problem that can be seen in the law as well when it comes to discrimination because the courts fail to view discrimination as an overarching umbrella of intersectionality.[7]

A way in which the matrix of domination works with regards to privilege can be if two people all have the same classification, except one person has an education and one does not have as high of an education. Their gender, race, sexuality, educational attainment all intersect to identify who they are. However, compared to other people one classification can point out privilege and, in turn, open more opportunities for one individual over the other.[3]

One of the main aspects of the matrix of domination is the fact that one may be privileged in one area, yet they can be oppressed in a different aspect of their identity. Some people believe that racial discrimination is on its way to being eradicated from the United States when they look as people like Colin Powell, a very successful, African-American, middle-aged man. Although Powell obtains the characteristics of a person that may not face oppression (upper-class, middle-aged, male), he is still discriminated against because of his race. This shows one of the key components of the matrix of domination; the idea that one cannot look at the individual facets of someone's identity, but rather that they are all interconnected.[8]

Matrix of domination compared to intersectionality Edit

Historical background on the matrix of domination Edit

In Collins' Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment, she first describes the concept of matrix thinking within the context of how black women in America encounter institutional discrimination based upon their race and gender.[9] A prominent example of this in the 1990s was racial segregation, especially as it related to housing, education, and employment. At the time, there was very little encouraged interaction between whites and blacks in these common sectors of society. Collins argues that this demonstrates how being black and female in America continues to perpetuate certain common experiences for African-American women. As such, African-American women live in a different world than those who are not black and female.[9] Collins notes how this shared social struggle can actually result in the formation of a group-based collective effort, citing how the high concentration of African-American women in the domestic labor sector in combination with racial segregation in housing and schooling contributed directly to the organization of the black feminist movement.[9] The collective wisdom shared by black women that held these specific experiences constituted a distinct viewpoint for African-American women concerning correlations between their race and gender and the resulting economic consequences.

Moolman points out the main issue concerning matrix thinking is how one accounts for the power dynamics between varying identifying categories that are ingrained in both oppression and domination instead of the traditional approach, reducing experiences to a single identity.[10] For instance, black women's experiences with society are used to illustrate how even though white scholars have attempted to use intersectionality in their research, they may still be inclined to default towards single-identity thinking that often fails to address all aspects of black women's experiences, thus ignoring the organization the matrix objectively offers.[11]

The matrix of domination in the colonial era and white society has also been carefully examined. The societal hierarchy determined by race and implemented under apartheid locates different racial populations in regards to their privilege, with African Americans usually at the bottom of the ladder. Dhamoon argues that on a global scale, the spot occupied by African Americans in such context is interchangeable with indigenous populations, as marginalized peoples are systematically working both within and across a matrix of interrelated axes of "penalty and privilege".[12] The interconnectivity of different identities in regards to power in racial structures in post-colonial era societies help illustrate what changes make a difference. The framework setup of the matrix of domination connects its origin theory and thought to existing struggles in the political and social spheres of society. A closer look at both specific and broader aspects of matrix thought will shed more light on the inner-workings and mechanisms that determine how different relationship dynamics influence matrix categorizations.[12]

May cites that an important implication that matrix thinking inspires is that it directly goes against what is often described as the socially inclusive ‘add and stir’ approach.[11] This is often used when describing the addition of one or more identity group to existing epistemological approaches, political strategies or research methodologies. This accounts for the proper weighing of power dynamics and their impact on different groups of people. Intersectionality centers power in a multi-pronged way as shifting across different sites and scales at the same time. Therefore, it is not neutral but evolved out of histories of struggle that pursue multidimensional forms of justice.[11]

Historical background on intersectionality Edit

Kimberlé Crenshaw, the founder of the term intersectionality, brought national and scholarly credential to the term through the paper Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics in The University of Chicago Legal Forum.[13] In the paper, she uses intersectionality to reveal how feminist movements and antiracist movements exclude women of color. Focusing on the experiences of Black women, she dissects several court cases, influential pieces of literature, personal experiences, and doctrinal manifestations as evidence for the way Black women are oppressed through many different experiences, systems and groups.

Though the specifics differ, the basic argument is the same: Black women are oppressed in a multitude of situations because people are unable to see how their identities intersect and influence each other. Feminism has been crafted for white middle-class women, only considering problems that affect this group of people. Unfortunately, this only captures a small facet of the oppression women face. By catering to the most privileged women and addressing only the problems they face, feminism alienates women of color and lower-class women by refusing to accept the way other forms of oppression feed into the sexism they face. Not only does feminism completely disregard the experiences of women of color, it also solidifies the connection between womanhood and whiteness when feminists speak for "all women".[13] (Crenshaw:154) Oppression cannot be detangled or separated easily in the same way identities cannot be separated easily. It is impossible to address the problem of sexism without addressing racism, as many women experience both racism and sexism. This theory can also be applied to the antiracist movement, which rarely addresses the problem of sexism, even though it is thoroughly intertwined with the problem of racism. Feminism remains white, and antiracism remains male. In essence, any theory that tries to measure the extent and manner of oppression Black women face will be wholly incorrect without using intersectionality.

Patricia Hill Collins wrote a book entitled Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment, which articulated "Black Feminist Thought" in relation to intersectionality with a focus on the plight of Black women in face of the world, the white feminist movement, and the male antiracism movement.[14] Collins references Crenshaw's concept of intersectionality and relates it to the matrix of domination, "The term matrix of domination describes this overall social organization within which intersecting oppressions originate, develop, and are contained.".[15]

Intersectionality and the matrix of domination Edit

Both intersectionality and the matrix of domination help sociologists understand power relationships and systems of oppression in society.[16] The matrix of domination looks at the overall organization of power in society while intersectionality is used to understand a specific social location of an identity using mutually constructing features of oppression.[9]

The concept of intersectionality today is used to move away from one dimensional thinking in the matrix of domination approach by allowing for different power dynamics of different identity categories at the same time. Researchers in public health are using Intersectionality-Based Policy Analysis (IBPA) Framework to show how social categories intersect to identify health disparities that evolve from factors beyond an individual's personal health.[17] Ferlatte applied an IBPA framework and used structural interviews to identify barriers to the allocation of HIV prevention funding for gay men. He highlighted policy more likely to cause harm than reduce the epidemic stemming from policy makers missing the ‘intersections of oppression, sex panic, and medicalization’.[18]

Intersectionality can also be used to correct for the over-attribution of traits to groups and be used to emphasize unique experiences within a group. As a result, the field of social work is introducing intersectional approaches in their research and client interactions. At the University of Arkansas, the curriculum for a Master of Social Work (MSW) is being amended to include the Multi-Systems Life Course (MSLC) approach.[19] Christy and Valandra apply an MSLC approach to intimate partner violence and economic abuse against poor women of color to explain that symbols of safety (such as police) in one population can be symbols of oppression in another.[20] By teaching this approach to future social workers, the default recommendation for these women to file a police report is amended and an intervention rooted in the individual case can emerge.

Implications of the matrix of domination Edit

Many approaches have been used that consider the concepts of identity, societal structures, and representation to be mutually exclusive, but the introduction of Patricia Hill Collins’ matrix of domination addresses the interlocking patterns of privilege and marginalization along the lines of race, class, gender, and class inside social institutions as well as at the community level.[21] With this work has come greater recognition of the various effects that each identity holds in different societal contexts, in both the micro- and macro-level structures within the systems of oppression that exist.[21]

In female criminality Edit

In April Bernard's article, "The Intersectional Alternative: Explaining Female Criminality", Bernard applies Patricia Hill Collins’ work to the study of feminist criminology, as a means of explaining the cumulative effects of identity in a system of oppression on women's decisions to commit a crime.[22] Bernard employs an intersectional approach to dissect the complexities that act as determinant factors in a woman's decision to partake in criminal activities, and more specifically, the limiting pressures of a patriarchal society.[22] In particular, this article is framed in response to Robert Merton's claims about deviance as a response to a lack of adequate resources to achieve cultural goals, as Bernard employs an intersectional paradigm model that explores female criminality as an expression of constraint and circumscription, rather than a "strained reality".[22] With this alternative framework, Bernard suggests that societal goals are not unanimous, and are instead shaped by individuals’ experiences in economic, political, and social spaces; for marginalized women, access to the means through which they build success are impacted by micro- and macro-level norms and histories that have created indicators of class (e.g. racial, economic, political, sexual) and subjugated them to limited networks.[22] Thus, identity makes women with marginalized identities more vulnerable in the legal system, subjugates to oppressive states within multiple institutions, and creating a need for policies that move toward creating an equitable reality for them.[22]


In Nancy A. Heitzeg's article " 'Whiteness', criminality, and double standards of deviance/social control" Heitzeg focuses on the construct of white racial framing and the impact that has on constructing Blackness with criminality.[23] In doing so Heitzeg speaks on the methods of social control, placed on those who are deviant from the norm of society. Mechanisms of social control find themselves helping to categorize those who are not cis-gendered and white as the "Other". Heitzeg, using Patricia Hill Collin's "matrix of domination" explores how shapes access to social control as well as opportunity.[24] Deviating from the social control base that finds itself at the intersections of race, gender, and class among other differences helps to solidify who is categorized as the "Other".

Markers associated with race, class, gender, etc., argues Heitzeg allows for stereotypes that allows for mitigation of a "redeemable" white middle class and criminalization for poor Black people and other people of color. White racial framing creates a space for constructing storylines of white deviance, simultaneously creating storylines of Black criminality.[25] This extends itself to the "medicalization" of whiteness, allowing for racial framing around whiteness to allow for associations of purity and redeem-ability. The opposite is imposed upon Black people. The identifiers associated with whiteness and Blackness allow for a framework in which subjects Blackness to something that is accepted as criminal.


In the context of criminality, the Matrix of Domination, may best present itself in the statistics:

Currently the number of women imprisoned in the United States is more than one million, making them the fastest growing population in the prison industrial complex.[26] The number of women in prison has massively increased from statistics found in the 1980s, more than eight times as many women have been reported to be either in prison, or are at the control of the criminal justice system.[26]

Within these numbers, Black and brown women are an overrepresented population. Black women represented roughly thirty percent of the prison population while only representing thirteen percent of the female population in the United States.[26] In addition, Hispanic women currently make up roughly sixteen percent of the prison population, while only making up eleven percent of the female population in the United States.[26]

The facts surrounding the cases for Black and brown women who are incarcerated show a pattern of these women being from urban areas, with an emphasis on their alleged crimes being ones of involvement or association, as opposed to being the sole perpetrator.[27] Scholars have attributed these numbers to the over-policing of these neighborhoods in which house an almost exclusively minority population. Other attributes come from the variations in arrest and sentencing policies and practices, prison expansions, especially with for profit prisons being on the rise.

In the welfare state Edit

In the United States, especially, the matrix of domination has implications within the welfare state. Several sociological studies on the welfare state take note of state-market relations while ignoring the salient roles held by other identities such as gender, race, class, language, and age, among others.[28] Due to the nature of the welfare state, there has not been much regard for exploring the existence of multiple axes of oppression which has led to lineation of categories of race, class, and gender.[28] In Politics, Gender, and Concepts, Gary Goertz and Amy Mazur assert that literature about the welfare state should focus on the relationship between social positions and social policies, as well as provide a framework for investigations into the causal effects of class, gender, and race. As such, using the idea of a matrix of domination in these kinds of studies provides a basis for empirical research on the relationship between social positions and policies, and also, for a comparison between the outcomes of social policies on marginalized and privileged women.[28]

Intersectionality of gender and class Edit

Benefits among class Edit

The benefits that upper-class citizens receive from their employer are far different from that of working-class employees. This is due to the upper class taking jobs that give them a higher status or position, whereas the working class take jobs with lower status such as retail and blue-collar jobs.[29] The most obvious benefit that differs between classes is the amount of money made. Upper-class workers receive significantly more pay than the working class, and while the upper class receive salaries, the lower class typically receive their pay based on hourly wages.[29] Moreover, the chance of getting a raise is greater for the higher-ups. More benefits that the upper class enjoy over the working class are vacation time, flexible hours, retirement savings, and greater coverage of healthcare and insurance.[30]

Benefits among gender Edit

When it comes to workplace benefits such as health insurance coverage, pensions, sick leave, and disability plans, there are gender differences in whether or not these benefits are offered. Women are less likely to be offered pensions, health coverage and disability plans. In fact, high poverty rates among elderly women have been linked to lack of pension coverage. Additionally, many female heads of household remain on welfare because they cannot find jobs with adequate health insurance coverage. When it comes to union contracts, men are also twice as likely to be covered.[31] This gender gap in benefits coverage may be due to the fact that women tend to have higher medical expenditures than males of the same age. As a result, some of the observed gap in wages between males and females in the United States could be the result of employers compensating for the higher cost of employer-sponsored health insurance. This further perpetuates gender discrimination because it means that firms who offer ESI (Employer Sponsored Insurance) will prefer to hire males. Another effect of women generally having greater healthcare expenses than men is that they are likely to place a higher value on insurance and be more inclined to pass up jobs for insurance-related reasons. This lowers the probability of obtaining jobs that pay higher wages directly and decrease a woman's bargaining power with her current employer. Indeed, health insurance has a larger (negative) effect on the job mobility of women, which they attribute to women's elevated healthcare expenses.[32]

Wage gap among class Edit

In the United States there is an unequal distribution of income between social classes for multiple reasons. Level of education has a great influence on average salaries. The higher the socioeconomic status (SES) of an individual the more likely they are to graduate from high school and potentially obtain a college degree, which in return increases their chances of a larger salary. The average salary of an individual with a high school diploma is about $35,000, but increases to about $60,000 by obtaining a bachelor's degree after.[33] The gap in salary increases with each additional level of education received. Those in the lower class face more obstacles and have less opportunities to pursue additional education due to their lack of resources. The wage gap is even larger for individuals affected by poverty and racial barriers. Whites have a median income of about $71,000 while blacks have a median income of about $43,000.[34] Statistics show that blacks make up 16% of public high school graduates, 14% of those enrolling in college, and only 9% of those receiving a bachelor's degree. At the same time, whites make up 59%, 58%, and 69%, respectively.[35] That is a 61% difference between blacks not obtaining a bachelor's degree and whites graduating with one. Individuals in poverty already face a disadvantage in obtaining the same level of income as their upper class coworkers, but when also affected by racial barriers the chances of reaching the same income are even fewer.

Wage gap among gender Edit

There is definitely intersectionality and inequality with women and men when it comes to wage gaps. Careers that pay well are often male dominated, and do not tolerate women and their personal needs. There has been a stable "pay gap" between men and women which has remained between 10–20% difference in their average earnings. (Women, careers and work life preferences). When discussing wage gaps between genders, scientists takes into account two questions, the first being "is there differential access jobs on the basis of gender?" and the second being, "is women’s work perceived to have less value than comparable work done by men?". When women begin to increase their numbers in certain job positions the status or value of the job decreases.[36] Conceptualizing intersectionality through class, gender and race then identifying the barriers that create inequality in Work organizations is found in the idea of "inequality regimes". Workplaces are prominent locations to analyze the continuous efforts of inequalities because many societal inequality issues stem in such areas. In the works of Inequality Regimes: Gender, Class, and Race in Organizations, inequality in gender, race, class are examined through intersectionality in organizations.[37] Joane Acker discussed Inequality Regimes: Gender, Class, and Race in Organizations in Sociologists for Women in Society Feminists Lecture through studies conducted using Swedish Bank. Studies have shown in the 1980s depict that wage gaps were increasing between genders. Men were being rewarded the higher paying positions such as local managers, and believed fair wages for men should be higher than fair wages for women.[38]

Representation among class Edit

Social class plays a large role on people's everyday life, yet their representation is not always fair. In television and popular culture, those who fall into the lower class are often portrayed differently based on if they are a woman or a man. If they are a woman, they often are portrayed as being more intelligent and responsible than their husbands, almost acting as their mothers.[39] The male head of the household is typically portrayed as being less intelligent, with some redeeming qualities, but typically is not respected.[39] Together they can be shown in a light that makes them seem lazy or dishonest.[40] The upper class however, does not face these same issues with representation in the media. The man of the household takes on stereotypical male qualities, while the woman takes on stereotypical female qualities. The children in this upper class scenario are what provides entertainment value, rather than focusing on the unintelligent and unorganized adults as in the lower class model.[39] Overall, in the upper-class family unit, they are portrayed as organized and put together, while the lower class model are portrayed as lazy and unorganized.

Representation among gender Edit

Whether one is a manager of a fast food restaurant or the CEO of a Fortune 500 company, authority is power and power is advantage. But just like the widespread power struggle, there is a widespread equality struggle. One of the largest workplace and societal inequalities is the inequality between genders. A prime example of this is the wage gap. Women in 2016 earned, on average, 82 cents to a man's dollar. This unequal pay is part of the reason that many women are the ones to leave the workforce when it is determined that a stay-at-home parent is required; if women are contributing less to the household income, it will make less of an impact if they quit their jobs.[41] Women are also not granted the same opportunities for employment as men. A clear example is the U.S. military. Women were banned from all combat roles until recently. In 2011, only 14 percent of the armed forces were female, and only 14 percent of officers were female.[42] Another example is the U.S. congress. In 2015, 80 percent of the Senate was male, and only 20 was female. This numbers were similar for the House, at 80.6 percent male and 19.4 percent female.[43] The gender composition of the military and the government, along with the wage gap, shines a lights on the gender inequality experienced right here at home, but this inequality is more greatly felt abroad. Some countries place strict limitations on women, not allowing them to vote or work or even drive a car. While the U.S. is seen as a country of dreams and opportunity, is far easier to see this when compared to an even more unequal country. The United States has been trending toward gender equality in recent years, but it has a while to go.

Research contributions Edit

An article found in the November 1998 issue of Social Problems details the conflict involving racial domination by identifying the complexity African-Americans face. In many cases, sociologists and laypersons alike are often limited in their approach to the problem. Michelle Byng, in "Mediating Discrimination: Oppression among African-American Muslim Women"—the 1998 article—brings to focus new approaches to understanding discrimination, but also, she writes to illustrate the many overlooked opportunities in which the discriminated are able to empower themselves in certain situations.

Intersectionality in court cases Edit

There are countless numbers of court cases that examine intersectionality within the workforce that did not allow individuals to have equal opportunities because of their race, gender, and social class.

The case, DeGraffenreid vs. General Motors, provides an example when the law does an injustice to those that face discrimination. Emma DeGraffenreid and four other black female production workers were laid off, and took it to court claiming that the company was violating Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 because, "it perpetrated past discriminatory practices of not hiring Black females." The court looked at each of the categories, race and gender, separately therefore they missed the discrimination of a person being both African-American and female. "It was argued, black women can expect little protection as long as approaches, such as that in DeGraffenreid, which completely obscure problems of intersectionality prevail."[44]

Another case, Maivan Lam v. University of Hawai'i, where intersectionality was the core reason behind the problem that emerged. Maivan Lam was not offered a job twice when she applied to be the Director of the Law School's Pacific Asian Legal Studies Program. Two times, the university was looking for a director and when the final offer came around, and she was the best candidate available, the university simply cancelled their search. In the first search, Professor Lam made it to the final round, but was not offered the job before the whole search was simply shut down. The second time, the position was offered to another candidate and the other candidate refused to accept, the search was simply cancelled without it being offered to Professor Lam. When Lam brought this situation up to the Dean, he suggested reopening the search so that male candidates who had not applied on time could submit their applications. It is stated, "Early in the 1989-90 academic year, the new appointments committee reviewed applications for a commercial law position. At one meeting, a male committee member stated that the Law School should not have two women teaching commercial law. This comment was reported to the Dean, who said that he recognized that the professor had difficulty dealing with women but took no action to remove him from the committee or otherwise to remedy the problem.".[45] There was clear intersectionality as Professor Lam was not only arguing regards to race but also how her gender affected her position.

In the case, Jefferies v. Harris County Community Action Association, April 21, 1980, Dafro M. Jefferies claimed that her former employer failed to promote her to a higher position because of her race and sex. In 1967 she was employed by Harris County Community Action Association as a Secretary to the Director of Programs. She was later promoted to Personal Interviewer in 1970. Everything seemed to be moving in a positive direction for her. However, between 1971 and April 1974, Jefferies applied for promotions in various positions and departments without any luck. She realized that her employer was discriminating against her when two Field Representative positions opened. Jefferies immediately applied. However, the positions were already staffed by a white female and black male the same day that she was told about the vacant position. The company had purposefully told her about the open positions knowing that they were already filled by other staff members. After several complaints to the company, on April 23, 1974 Jefferies was placed on probation. In June 1974, she was terminated from the job because she had called the company out for discriminating against her because of her race and sex. There was clear evidence of intersectionality in this case, she argued; she was not promoted to a higher position because she was both black and a female. However, the court ultimately disagreed with her, insofar as there existed zero concrete evidence to support her case.[46]

See also Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Collins, Patricia Hill. (2000) Black Feminist Thought: knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment. New York, Routledge.
  • Byng, Michelle D (1998). "Mediating Discrimination: Resisting Oppression among African-American Muslim Women". Social Problems. 45 (4): 473–487. doi:10.1525/sp.1998.45.4.03x0176t.

References Edit

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  38. ^ Acker, Joan (2006). "INEQUALITY REGIMES Gender, Class, and Race in Organizations". Gender & Society. 20 (4): 441–464. doi:10.1177/0891243206289499. S2CID 145118830.
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  45. ^ United States District Court for the District of Hawai'i, 1994, Maivan Lam, Plaintiff-appellant, v. University of Hawai'i; Albert Simone, in His Capacity Aspresident of the University of Hawai'i; Andjeremy Harrison, in His Capacity As Deanof the Richardson School Oflaw, Defendants-appellees, 40 F.3d 1551 (9th Cir. 1994)
  46. ^ "Jeffries v. Harris County Community Action Ass'n, 425 F. Supp. 1208 (S.D. Tex. 1977)".

External links Edit

  • Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought in the Matrix of Domination
  • The Matrix of Domination, Prof Pat's World of Women's Studies
  • [1]

matrix, domination, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, examples, perspective, this, article, deal, primarily, with, united, states, represent, worldwide, v. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The matrix of domination or matrix of oppression is a sociological paradigm that explains issues of oppression that deal with race class and gender which though recognized as different social classifications are all interconnected Other forms of classification such as sexual orientation religion or age apply to this theory as well Patricia Hill Collins is credited with introducing the theory in her work entitled Black Feminist Thought Knowledge Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment 1 As the term implies there are many different ways one might experience domination facing many different challenges in which one obstacle such as race may overlap with other sociological features Characteristics such as race age and sex may intersectionally affect an individual in extremely different ways in such simple cases as varying geography socioeconomic status or simply throughout time Other scholars such as Kimberle Crenshaw s Mapping the Margins Intersectionality Identity Politics and Violence against Women of Color are credited with expanding Collins work 2 The matrix of domination is a way for people to acknowledge their privileges in society How one is able to interact what social groups one is in and the networks one establishes is all based on different interconnected classifications 3 Contents 1 Theory applied 2 Matrix of domination compared to intersectionality 2 1 Historical background on the matrix of domination 2 2 Historical background on intersectionality 2 3 Intersectionality and the matrix of domination 3 Implications of the matrix of domination 3 1 In female criminality 3 2 In the welfare state 4 Intersectionality of gender and class 4 1 Benefits among class 4 2 Benefits among gender 4 3 Wage gap among class 4 4 Wage gap among gender 4 5 Representation among class 4 6 Representation among gender 4 7 Research contributions 5 Intersectionality in court cases 6 See also 7 Further reading 8 References 9 External linksTheory applied EditThough Collins main focus of the theory of the matrix of domination was applied to African American women there are many other examples that can be used to illustrate the theory Other examples include Log Cabin Republicans 4 female criminality 5 and African American Muslim women 6 One of the key concepts of the matrix of domination is that the different categories like race and gender are separate groups rather than a combination This is a problem that can be seen in the law as well when it comes to discrimination because the courts fail to view discrimination as an overarching umbrella of intersectionality 7 A way in which the matrix of domination works with regards to privilege can be if two people all have the same classification except one person has an education and one does not have as high of an education Their gender race sexuality educational attainment all intersect to identify who they are However compared to other people one classification can point out privilege and in turn open more opportunities for one individual over the other 3 One of the main aspects of the matrix of domination is the fact that one may be privileged in one area yet they can be oppressed in a different aspect of their identity Some people believe that racial discrimination is on its way to being eradicated from the United States when they look as people like Colin Powell a very successful African American middle aged man Although Powell obtains the characteristics of a person that may not face oppression upper class middle aged male he is still discriminated against because of his race This shows one of the key components of the matrix of domination the idea that one cannot look at the individual facets of someone s identity but rather that they are all interconnected 8 Matrix of domination compared to intersectionality EditHistorical background on the matrix of domination Edit In Collins Black Feminist Thought Knowledge Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment she first describes the concept of matrix thinking within the context of how black women in America encounter institutional discrimination based upon their race and gender 9 A prominent example of this in the 1990s was racial segregation especially as it related to housing education and employment At the time there was very little encouraged interaction between whites and blacks in these common sectors of society Collins argues that this demonstrates how being black and female in America continues to perpetuate certain common experiences for African American women As such African American women live in a different world than those who are not black and female 9 Collins notes how this shared social struggle can actually result in the formation of a group based collective effort citing how the high concentration of African American women in the domestic labor sector in combination with racial segregation in housing and schooling contributed directly to the organization of the black feminist movement 9 The collective wisdom shared by black women that held these specific experiences constituted a distinct viewpoint for African American women concerning correlations between their race and gender and the resulting economic consequences Moolman points out the main issue concerning matrix thinking is how one accounts for the power dynamics between varying identifying categories that are ingrained in both oppression and domination instead of the traditional approach reducing experiences to a single identity 10 For instance black women s experiences with society are used to illustrate how even though white scholars have attempted to use intersectionality in their research they may still be inclined to default towards single identity thinking that often fails to address all aspects of black women s experiences thus ignoring the organization the matrix objectively offers 11 The matrix of domination in the colonial era and white society has also been carefully examined The societal hierarchy determined by race and implemented under apartheid locates different racial populations in regards to their privilege with African Americans usually at the bottom of the ladder Dhamoon argues that on a global scale the spot occupied by African Americans in such context is interchangeable with indigenous populations as marginalized peoples are systematically working both within and across a matrix of interrelated axes of penalty and privilege 12 The interconnectivity of different identities in regards to power in racial structures in post colonial era societies help illustrate what changes make a difference The framework setup of the matrix of domination connects its origin theory and thought to existing struggles in the political and social spheres of society A closer look at both specific and broader aspects of matrix thought will shed more light on the inner workings and mechanisms that determine how different relationship dynamics influence matrix categorizations 12 May cites that an important implication that matrix thinking inspires is that it directly goes against what is often described as the socially inclusive add and stir approach 11 This is often used when describing the addition of one or more identity group to existing epistemological approaches political strategies or research methodologies This accounts for the proper weighing of power dynamics and their impact on different groups of people Intersectionality centers power in a multi pronged way as shifting across different sites and scales at the same time Therefore it is not neutral but evolved out of histories of struggle that pursue multidimensional forms of justice 11 Historical background on intersectionality Edit Kimberle Crenshaw the founder of the term intersectionality brought national and scholarly credential to the term through the paper Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics in The University of Chicago Legal Forum 13 In the paper she uses intersectionality to reveal how feminist movements and antiracist movements exclude women of color Focusing on the experiences of Black women she dissects several court cases influential pieces of literature personal experiences and doctrinal manifestations as evidence for the way Black women are oppressed through many different experiences systems and groups Though the specifics differ the basic argument is the same Black women are oppressed in a multitude of situations because people are unable to see how their identities intersect and influence each other Feminism has been crafted for white middle class women only considering problems that affect this group of people Unfortunately this only captures a small facet of the oppression women face By catering to the most privileged women and addressing only the problems they face feminism alienates women of color and lower class women by refusing to accept the way other forms of oppression feed into the sexism they face Not only does feminism completely disregard the experiences of women of color it also solidifies the connection between womanhood and whiteness when feminists speak for all women 13 Crenshaw 154 Oppression cannot be detangled or separated easily in the same way identities cannot be separated easily It is impossible to address the problem of sexism without addressing racism as many women experience both racism and sexism This theory can also be applied to the antiracist movement which rarely addresses the problem of sexism even though it is thoroughly intertwined with the problem of racism Feminism remains white and antiracism remains male In essence any theory that tries to measure the extent and manner of oppression Black women face will be wholly incorrect without using intersectionality Patricia Hill Collins wrote a book entitled Black Feminist Thought Knowledge Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment which articulated Black Feminist Thought in relation to intersectionality with a focus on the plight of Black women in face of the world the white feminist movement and the male antiracism movement 14 Collins references Crenshaw s concept of intersectionality and relates it to the matrix of domination The term matrix of domination describes this overall social organization within which intersecting oppressions originate develop and are contained 15 Intersectionality and the matrix of domination Edit Both intersectionality and the matrix of domination help sociologists understand power relationships and systems of oppression in society 16 The matrix of domination looks at the overall organization of power in society while intersectionality is used to understand a specific social location of an identity using mutually constructing features of oppression 9 The concept of intersectionality today is used to move away from one dimensional thinking in the matrix of domination approach by allowing for different power dynamics of different identity categories at the same time Researchers in public health are using Intersectionality Based Policy Analysis IBPA Framework to show how social categories intersect to identify health disparities that evolve from factors beyond an individual s personal health 17 Ferlatte applied an IBPA framework and used structural interviews to identify barriers to the allocation of HIV prevention funding for gay men He highlighted policy more likely to cause harm than reduce the epidemic stemming from policy makers missing the intersections of oppression sex panic and medicalization 18 Intersectionality can also be used to correct for the over attribution of traits to groups and be used to emphasize unique experiences within a group As a result the field of social work is introducing intersectional approaches in their research and client interactions At the University of Arkansas the curriculum for a Master of Social Work MSW is being amended to include the Multi Systems Life Course MSLC approach 19 Christy and Valandra apply an MSLC approach to intimate partner violence and economic abuse against poor women of color to explain that symbols of safety such as police in one population can be symbols of oppression in another 20 By teaching this approach to future social workers the default recommendation for these women to file a police report is amended and an intervention rooted in the individual case can emerge Implications of the matrix of domination EditMany approaches have been used that consider the concepts of identity societal structures and representation to be mutually exclusive but the introduction of Patricia Hill Collins matrix of domination addresses the interlocking patterns of privilege and marginalization along the lines of race class gender and class inside social institutions as well as at the community level 21 With this work has come greater recognition of the various effects that each identity holds in different societal contexts in both the micro and macro level structures within the systems of oppression that exist 21 In female criminality Edit In April Bernard s article The Intersectional Alternative Explaining Female Criminality Bernard applies Patricia Hill Collins work to the study of feminist criminology as a means of explaining the cumulative effects of identity in a system of oppression on women s decisions to commit a crime 22 Bernard employs an intersectional approach to dissect the complexities that act as determinant factors in a woman s decision to partake in criminal activities and more specifically the limiting pressures of a patriarchal society 22 In particular this article is framed in response to Robert Merton s claims about deviance as a response to a lack of adequate resources to achieve cultural goals as Bernard employs an intersectional paradigm model that explores female criminality as an expression of constraint and circumscription rather than a strained reality 22 With this alternative framework Bernard suggests that societal goals are not unanimous and are instead shaped by individuals experiences in economic political and social spaces for marginalized women access to the means through which they build success are impacted by micro and macro level norms and histories that have created indicators of class e g racial economic political sexual and subjugated them to limited networks 22 Thus identity makes women with marginalized identities more vulnerable in the legal system subjugates to oppressive states within multiple institutions and creating a need for policies that move toward creating an equitable reality for them 22 In Nancy A Heitzeg s article Whiteness criminality and double standards of deviance social control Heitzeg focuses on the construct of white racial framing and the impact that has on constructing Blackness with criminality 23 In doing so Heitzeg speaks on the methods of social control placed on those who are deviant from the norm of society Mechanisms of social control find themselves helping to categorize those who are not cis gendered and white as the Other Heitzeg using Patricia Hill Collin s matrix of domination explores how shapes access to social control as well as opportunity 24 Deviating from the social control base that finds itself at the intersections of race gender and class among other differences helps to solidify who is categorized as the Other Markers associated with race class gender etc argues Heitzeg allows for stereotypes that allows for mitigation of a redeemable white middle class and criminalization for poor Black people and other people of color White racial framing creates a space for constructing storylines of white deviance simultaneously creating storylines of Black criminality 25 This extends itself to the medicalization of whiteness allowing for racial framing around whiteness to allow for associations of purity and redeem ability The opposite is imposed upon Black people The identifiers associated with whiteness and Blackness allow for a framework in which subjects Blackness to something that is accepted as criminal In the context of criminality the Matrix of Domination may best present itself in the statistics Currently the number of women imprisoned in the United States is more than one million making them the fastest growing population in the prison industrial complex 26 The number of women in prison has massively increased from statistics found in the 1980s more than eight times as many women have been reported to be either in prison or are at the control of the criminal justice system 26 Within these numbers Black and brown women are an overrepresented population Black women represented roughly thirty percent of the prison population while only representing thirteen percent of the female population in the United States 26 In addition Hispanic women currently make up roughly sixteen percent of the prison population while only making up eleven percent of the female population in the United States 26 The facts surrounding the cases for Black and brown women who are incarcerated show a pattern of these women being from urban areas with an emphasis on their alleged crimes being ones of involvement or association as opposed to being the sole perpetrator 27 Scholars have attributed these numbers to the over policing of these neighborhoods in which house an almost exclusively minority population Other attributes come from the variations in arrest and sentencing policies and practices prison expansions especially with for profit prisons being on the rise In the welfare state Edit In the United States especially the matrix of domination has implications within the welfare state Several sociological studies on the welfare state take note of state market relations while ignoring the salient roles held by other identities such as gender race class language and age among others 28 Due to the nature of the welfare state there has not been much regard for exploring the existence of multiple axes of oppression which has led to lineation of categories of race class and gender 28 In Politics Gender and Concepts Gary Goertz and Amy Mazur assert that literature about the welfare state should focus on the relationship between social positions and social policies as well as provide a framework for investigations into the causal effects of class gender and race As such using the idea of a matrix of domination in these kinds of studies provides a basis for empirical research on the relationship between social positions and policies and also for a comparison between the outcomes of social policies on marginalized and privileged women 28 Intersectionality of gender and class EditBenefits among class Edit The benefits that upper class citizens receive from their employer are far different from that of working class employees This is due to the upper class taking jobs that give them a higher status or position whereas the working class take jobs with lower status such as retail and blue collar jobs 29 The most obvious benefit that differs between classes is the amount of money made Upper class workers receive significantly more pay than the working class and while the upper class receive salaries the lower class typically receive their pay based on hourly wages 29 Moreover the chance of getting a raise is greater for the higher ups More benefits that the upper class enjoy over the working class are vacation time flexible hours retirement savings and greater coverage of healthcare and insurance 30 Benefits among gender Edit When it comes to workplace benefits such as health insurance coverage pensions sick leave and disability plans there are gender differences in whether or not these benefits are offered Women are less likely to be offered pensions health coverage and disability plans In fact high poverty rates among elderly women have been linked to lack of pension coverage Additionally many female heads of household remain on welfare because they cannot find jobs with adequate health insurance coverage When it comes to union contracts men are also twice as likely to be covered 31 This gender gap in benefits coverage may be due to the fact that women tend to have higher medical expenditures than males of the same age As a result some of the observed gap in wages between males and females in the United States could be the result of employers compensating for the higher cost of employer sponsored health insurance This further perpetuates gender discrimination because it means that firms who offer ESI Employer Sponsored Insurance will prefer to hire males Another effect of women generally having greater healthcare expenses than men is that they are likely to place a higher value on insurance and be more inclined to pass up jobs for insurance related reasons This lowers the probability of obtaining jobs that pay higher wages directly and decrease a woman s bargaining power with her current employer Indeed health insurance has a larger negative effect on the job mobility of women which they attribute to women s elevated healthcare expenses 32 Wage gap among class Edit In the United States there is an unequal distribution of income between social classes for multiple reasons Level of education has a great influence on average salaries The higher the socioeconomic status SES of an individual the more likely they are to graduate from high school and potentially obtain a college degree which in return increases their chances of a larger salary The average salary of an individual with a high school diploma is about 35 000 but increases to about 60 000 by obtaining a bachelor s degree after 33 The gap in salary increases with each additional level of education received Those in the lower class face more obstacles and have less opportunities to pursue additional education due to their lack of resources The wage gap is even larger for individuals affected by poverty and racial barriers Whites have a median income of about 71 000 while blacks have a median income of about 43 000 34 Statistics show that blacks make up 16 of public high school graduates 14 of those enrolling in college and only 9 of those receiving a bachelor s degree At the same time whites make up 59 58 and 69 respectively 35 That is a 61 difference between blacks not obtaining a bachelor s degree and whites graduating with one Individuals in poverty already face a disadvantage in obtaining the same level of income as their upper class coworkers but when also affected by racial barriers the chances of reaching the same income are even fewer Wage gap among gender Edit There is definitely intersectionality and inequality with women and men when it comes to wage gaps Careers that pay well are often male dominated and do not tolerate women and their personal needs There has been a stable pay gap between men and women which has remained between 10 20 difference in their average earnings Women careers and work life preferences When discussing wage gaps between genders scientists takes into account two questions the first being is there differential access jobs on the basis of gender and the second being is women s work perceived to have less value than comparable work done by men When women begin to increase their numbers in certain job positions the status or value of the job decreases 36 Conceptualizing intersectionality through class gender and race then identifying the barriers that create inequality in Work organizations is found in the idea of inequality regimes Workplaces are prominent locations to analyze the continuous efforts of inequalities because many societal inequality issues stem in such areas In the works of Inequality Regimes Gender Class and Race in Organizations inequality in gender race class are examined through intersectionality in organizations 37 Joane Acker discussed Inequality Regimes Gender Class and Race in Organizations in Sociologists for Women in Society Feminists Lecture through studies conducted using Swedish Bank Studies have shown in the 1980s depict that wage gaps were increasing between genders Men were being rewarded the higher paying positions such as local managers and believed fair wages for men should be higher than fair wages for women 38 Representation among class Edit Social class plays a large role on people s everyday life yet their representation is not always fair In television and popular culture those who fall into the lower class are often portrayed differently based on if they are a woman or a man If they are a woman they often are portrayed as being more intelligent and responsible than their husbands almost acting as their mothers 39 The male head of the household is typically portrayed as being less intelligent with some redeeming qualities but typically is not respected 39 Together they can be shown in a light that makes them seem lazy or dishonest 40 The upper class however does not face these same issues with representation in the media The man of the household takes on stereotypical male qualities while the woman takes on stereotypical female qualities The children in this upper class scenario are what provides entertainment value rather than focusing on the unintelligent and unorganized adults as in the lower class model 39 Overall in the upper class family unit they are portrayed as organized and put together while the lower class model are portrayed as lazy and unorganized Representation among gender Edit Whether one is a manager of a fast food restaurant or the CEO of a Fortune 500 company authority is power and power is advantage But just like the widespread power struggle there is a widespread equality struggle One of the largest workplace and societal inequalities is the inequality between genders A prime example of this is the wage gap Women in 2016 earned on average 82 cents to a man s dollar This unequal pay is part of the reason that many women are the ones to leave the workforce when it is determined that a stay at home parent is required if women are contributing less to the household income it will make less of an impact if they quit their jobs 41 Women are also not granted the same opportunities for employment as men A clear example is the U S military Women were banned from all combat roles until recently In 2011 only 14 percent of the armed forces were female and only 14 percent of officers were female 42 Another example is the U S congress In 2015 80 percent of the Senate was male and only 20 was female This numbers were similar for the House at 80 6 percent male and 19 4 percent female 43 The gender composition of the military and the government along with the wage gap shines a lights on the gender inequality experienced right here at home but this inequality is more greatly felt abroad Some countries place strict limitations on women not allowing them to vote or work or even drive a car While the U S is seen as a country of dreams and opportunity is far easier to see this when compared to an even more unequal country The United States has been trending toward gender equality in recent years but it has a while to go Research contributions Edit An article found in the November 1998 issue of Social Problems details the conflict involving racial domination by identifying the complexity African Americans face In many cases sociologists and laypersons alike are often limited in their approach to the problem Michelle Byng in Mediating Discrimination Oppression among African American Muslim Women the 1998 article brings to focus new approaches to understanding discrimination but also she writes to illustrate the many overlooked opportunities in which the discriminated are able to empower themselves in certain situations Intersectionality in court cases EditThere are countless numbers of court cases that examine intersectionality within the workforce that did not allow individuals to have equal opportunities because of their race gender and social class The case DeGraffenreid vs General Motors provides an example when the law does an injustice to those that face discrimination Emma DeGraffenreid and four other black female production workers were laid off and took it to court claiming that the company was violating Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 because it perpetrated past discriminatory practices of not hiring Black females The court looked at each of the categories race and gender separately therefore they missed the discrimination of a person being both African American and female It was argued black women can expect little protection as long as approaches such as that in DeGraffenreid which completely obscure problems of intersectionality prevail 44 Another case Maivan Lam v University of Hawai i where intersectionality was the core reason behind the problem that emerged Maivan Lam was not offered a job twice when she applied to be the Director of the Law School s Pacific Asian Legal Studies Program Two times the university was looking for a director and when the final offer came around and she was the best candidate available the university simply cancelled their search In the first search Professor Lam made it to the final round but was not offered the job before the whole search was simply shut down The second time the position was offered to another candidate and the other candidate refused to accept the search was simply cancelled without it being offered to Professor Lam When Lam brought this situation up to the Dean he suggested reopening the search so that male candidates who had not applied on time could submit their applications It is stated Early in the 1989 90 academic year the new appointments committee reviewed applications for a commercial law position At one meeting a male committee member stated that the Law School should not have two women teaching commercial law This comment was reported to the Dean who said that he recognized that the professor had difficulty dealing with women but took no action to remove him from the committee or otherwise to remedy the problem 45 There was clear intersectionality as Professor Lam was not only arguing regards to race but also how her gender affected her position In the case Jefferies v Harris County Community Action Association April 21 1980 Dafro M Jefferies claimed that her former employer failed to promote her to a higher position because of her race and sex In 1967 she was employed by Harris County Community Action Association as a Secretary to the Director of Programs She was later promoted to Personal Interviewer in 1970 Everything seemed to be moving in a positive direction for her However between 1971 and April 1974 Jefferies applied for promotions in various positions and departments without any luck She realized that her employer was discriminating against her when two Field Representative positions opened Jefferies immediately applied However the positions were already staffed by a white female and black male the same day that she was told about the vacant position The company had purposefully told her about the open positions knowing that they were already filled by other staff members After several complaints to the company on April 23 1974 Jefferies was placed on probation In June 1974 she was terminated from the job because she had called the company out for discriminating against her because of her race and sex There was clear evidence of intersectionality in this case she argued she was not promoted to a higher position because she was both black and a female However the court ultimately disagreed with her insofar as there existed zero concrete evidence to support her case 46 See also EditBlack feminism Intersectionality Multiple jeopardy Triple oppressionFurther reading EditCollins Patricia Hill 2000 Black Feminist Thought knowledge consciousness and the politics of empowerment New York Routledge Byng Michelle D 1998 Mediating Discrimination Resisting Oppression among African American Muslim Women Social Problems 45 4 473 487 doi 10 1525 sp 1998 45 4 03x0176t References Edit Patricia Hill Collins Black Feminist Thought in the Matrix of Domination www hartford hwp com Retrieved 2018 03 08 Crenshaw Kimberle 1991 Mapping the Margins Intersectionality Identity Politics and Violence against Women of Color Stanford Law Review 43 6 1241 1299 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 695 5934 doi 10 2307 1229039 JSTOR 1229039 a b Publications Women and Gender Studies Retrieved 2018 03 27 Rogers Mary F Lott Phillip B 1997 Backlash the Matrix of Domination and Log Cabin Republicans The Sociological Quarterly 38 3 497 512 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1997 tb00489 x JSTOR 4121156 Bernard April May 15 2012 The Intersectional Alternative Explaining Female Criminality Feminist Criminology 8 3 19 doi 10 1177 1557085112445304 S2CID 146950388 Byng Michelle D 1998 Mediating Discrimination Resisting Oppression Among African American Muslim Women Social Problems 45 4 473 487 doi 10 2307 3097208 JSTOR 3097208 Cousins Oswald B November 10 2017 The Judicial Approach to Intersectional Discrimination Significant Decisions from a Defense Perspective a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help matrix of domination A so sociologist rampages us Retrieved 2018 04 01 a b c d Collins Patricia Hill 2000 Black Feminist Thought knowledge consciousness and the politics of empowerment New York Routledge Moolman Benita 2013 Rethinking masculinities in transition in South Africa considering the intersectionality of race class and sexuality with gender African Identities 11 93 105 doi 10 1080 14725843 2013 775843 S2CID 143227446 a b c May Vivian 2015 01 01 Pursuing Intersectionality Unsettling Dominant Imaginaries ISBN 9780415808408 a b A FEMINIST APPROACH TO DECOLONIZING ANTI RACISM RETHINKING TRANSNATIONALISM INTERSECTIONALITY AND SETTLER COLONIALISM feralfeminisms com Retrieved 2018 03 31 a b Crenshaw Kimberle Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics Chicago Unbound 139 167 Collins Patricia 2009 Black Feminist Thought Knowledge Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment New York Routledge Collins Patricia 2009 Black Feminist Thought Knowledge Consciousness and the Politics of Empowerment New York Routledge p 227 Gouws Amanda June 2017 Feminist intersectionality and the matrix of domination in South Africa Agenda 31 19 27 doi 10 1080 10130950 2017 1338871 S2CID 149258430 Bowleg L 2012 The Problem With the Phrase Women and Minorities Intersectionality an Important Theoretical Framework for Public Health American Journal of Public Health 102 7 1267 1273 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2012 300750 PMC 3477987 PMID 22594719 Ferlatte Olivier 2012 Are There Enough Gay Dollars An Intersectionality Based Policy Analysis of HIV Prevention Funding for Gay Men in British Columbia Canada 189 210 Murphy Erby Yvette Christy McMullin Kameri Stuass Kimberly Schriver Joe August 2010 Multi Systems Life Course A New Practice Perspective and Its Application in Advanced Practice with Racial and Ethnic Populations Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment 20 5 672 687 doi 10 1080 10911351003751868 S2CID 144026337 Christy Kameri Valandra Dr September 2017 A Multi Systems Life Course Perspective of Economic Abuse Advances in Social Work 18 1 80 102 doi 10 18060 21288 a b Winker Gabriele Degele Nina 2011 Intersectionality as multi level analysis Dealing with social inequality PDF European Journal of Women s Studies 18 51 66 doi 10 1177 1350506810386084 S2CID 54739589 a b c d e Bernard April 2013 The Intersectional Alternative Explaining Female Criminality Feminist Criminology 8 3 19 doi 10 1177 1557085112445304 S2CID 146950388 Heitzeg Nancy A 2015 04 03 Whiteness criminality and the double standards of deviance social control Contemporary Justice Review 18 2 197 214 doi 10 1080 10282580 2015 1025630 ISSN 1028 2580 S2CID 144786823 Heitzeg Nancy A 2015 04 03 Whiteness criminality and the double standards of deviance social control Contemporary Justice Review 18 2 197 214 doi 10 1080 10282580 2015 1025630 ISSN 1028 2580 S2CID 144786823 Heitzeg Nancy A 2015 04 03 Whiteness criminality and the double standards of deviance social control Contemporary Justice Review 18 2 197 214 doi 10 1080 10282580 2015 1025630 ISSN 1028 2580 S2CID 144786823 a b c d Facts about the Over Incarceration of Women in the United States American Civil Liberties Union Retrieved 2020 11 10 Number of Women in Jails and Prisons Soars University of Chicago SSA www ssa uchicago edu Retrieved 2020 11 10 a b c Mazur Amy G Goertz Gary 2008 Politics Gender and Concepts United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521897761 a b Work Life Balance Benefits Low Wage Workers Employers Pacific Standard Retrieved 2018 03 30 Who is working class Working Class Perspectives 2008 07 28 Retrieved 2018 03 30 Currie Janet January 1993 Gender Gaps in Benefits Coverage NBER Working Paper No 4265 doi 10 3386 w4265 Cowan Benjamin Schwab Benjamin 2016 01 01 Employer sponsored health insurance and the gender wage gap Journal of Health Economics 45 103 114 doi 10 1016 j jhealeco 2015 09 008 ISSN 0167 6296 PMID 26614691 The Average Salary by Education Level SmartAsset SmartAsset Retrieved 2018 03 30 1 Demographic trends and economic well being Pew Research Center s Social amp Demographic Trends Project 2016 06 27 Retrieved 2018 03 30 More Hispanics blacks enrolling in college but lag in bachelor s degrees Pew Research Center 2014 04 24 Retrieved 2018 03 30 Hakim Catherine 18 January 2017 Women careers and work life preferences British Journal of Guidance amp Counselling 34 3 279 294 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 463 726 doi 10 1080 03069880600769118 S2CID 13388770 Alksins Christine 21 May 2008 Workforce Segregation and the Gender Wage Gap Is Women s Work Valued as Highly as Men s Journal of Applied Social Psychology 38 6 1416 1441 doi 10 1111 j 1559 1816 2008 00354 x Acker Joan 2006 INEQUALITY REGIMES Gender Class and Race in Organizations Gender amp Society 20 4 441 464 doi 10 1177 0891243206289499 S2CID 145118830 a b c The Museum of Broadcast Communications Encyclopedia of Television Social Class and Television www museum tv Retrieved 2018 03 30 Woods Taniesha October 25 2004 The Development of Stereotypes About the Rich and Poor Age Race and Family Income Differences in Beliefs PDF Journal of Youth and Adolescence 34 Vasel Kathryn 5 things to know about the gender pay gap CNNMoney Retrieved 2018 03 30 CNN Staff By the numbers Women in the U S military CNN Retrieved 2018 03 30 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Bump Philip 2015 01 05 The new Congress is 80 percent white 80 percent male and 92 percent Christian Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2018 03 30 Cousins Oswald B November 10 2017 The Judicial Approach to Intersectional Discrimination Significant Decisions from a Defense Perspective United States District Court for the District of Hawai i 1994 Maivan Lam Plaintiff appellant v University of Hawai i Albert Simone in His Capacity Aspresident of the University of Hawai i Andjeremy Harrison in His Capacity As Deanof the Richardson School Oflaw Defendants appellees 40 F 3d 1551 9th Cir 1994 Jeffries v Harris County Community Action Ass n 425 F Supp 1208 S D Tex 1977 External links EditPatricia Hill Collins Black Feminist Thought in the Matrix of Domination The Matrix of Domination Prof Pat s World of Women s Studies 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matrix of domination amp oldid 1145961486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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