User:Georginamackie9/Venezuelan labour law/Bibliography: Difference between revisions

 

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== Bibliography ==

== Bibliography ==

*Official Bibliography (Chicago Style)

** Elfenbein, Rachel. 2019. ”Engendering Revolution”. University of Texas Press.

** Elfenbein, Rachel. “Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law.” Latin American Perspectives 48, no. 5 (2021): 75–95.

** Friedman, Elisabeth J. 2010. ”Unfinished Transitions”. Penn State Press.

** Hernández, Ana. 2021. “Socialist Feminism in Venezuela: Revolution on Three Fronts.” ”Feminist Studies” 47 (3): 576–93. <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1353/fem.2021.0031</nowiki>.

** IBP, Inc. 2018. ”Venezuela Banking and Financial Market Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Regulations”. Lulu.com.

* Extended Bibliography

* ”’Elfenbein, R. (2021) Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law. ”Latin American perspectives”. [Online] 48 (5), 75–95”’.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Elfenbein |first=Rachel |date=2021-05-19 |title=Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law |url=https://doi.org/10.1177/0094582×211013023 |journal=Latin American Perspectives |volume=48 |issue=5 |pages=75–95 |doi=10.1177/0094582×211013023 |issn=0094-582X}}</ref>

* ”’Elfenbein, R. (2021) Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law. ”Latin American perspectives”. [Online] 48 (5), 75–95”’.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Elfenbein |first=Rachel |date=2021-05-19 |title=Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law |url=https://doi.org/10.1177/0094582×211013023 |journal=Latin American Perspectives |volume=48 |issue=5 |pages=75–95 |doi=10.1177/0094582×211013023 |issn=0094-582X}}</ref>

* This peer reviewed academic article is a reliable source for examining how Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labour Law advanced women’s labour rights through provision that promoted gender justice. For example, the article provides factual details on legal measures made sexual harassment and workplace discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation and pregnancy illegal. Additionally, this article provides insight into women’s organisations’ responses to the 2012 Law, making it a useful source to contribute to the understanding of feminist movements surrounding the Law.

* This peer reviewed academic article is a reliable source for examining how Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labour Law advanced women’s labour rights through provision that promoted gender justice. For example, the article provides factual details on legal measures made sexual harassment and workplace discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation and pregnancy illegal. Additionally, this article provides insight into women’s organisations’ responses to the 2012 Law, making it a useful source to contribute to the understanding of feminist movements surrounding the Law.

You will be compiling your bibliography in this sandbox.

  • Official Bibliography (Chicago Style)
    • Elfenbein, Rachel. 2019. Engendering Revolution. University of Texas Press.
    • Elfenbein, Rachel. “Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law.” Latin American Perspectives 48, no. 5 (2021): 75–95.
    • Friedman, Elisabeth J. 2010. Unfinished Transitions. Penn State Press.
    • Hernández, Ana. 2021. “Socialist Feminism in Venezuela: Revolution on Three Fronts.” Feminist Studies 47 (3): 576–93. https://doi.org/10.1353/fem.2021.0031.
    • IBP, Inc. 2018. Venezuela Banking and Financial Market Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Regulations. Lulu.com.
  • Extended Bibliography
  • Elfenbein, R. (2021) Mobilized Yet Contained: Popular Women, Feminisms, and Organizing around Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labor Law. Latin American perspectives. [Online] 48 (5), 75–95.[1]
  • This peer reviewed academic article is a reliable source for examining how Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labour Law advanced women’s labour rights through provision that promoted gender justice. For example, the article provides factual details on legal measures made sexual harassment and workplace discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation and pregnancy illegal. Additionally, this article provides insight into women’s organisations’ responses to the 2012 Law, making it a useful source to contribute to the understanding of feminist movements surrounding the Law.
  • Ibp, Inc.. Venezuela Banking and Financial Market Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Regulations. United States: Global Pro Info USA, 2018. [2]
  • This handbook provides factual background on the 2012 Organic Labour Law. P.228 offers a concise overview of the Law, which can help establish a clear definition to use in my article. Although the book only dedicates a few sentences to the topic and therefore cannot be used to establish notability or detailed context, it is useful to confirm specific facts. For example, how “The law also introduced new rights for female workers with children, including: 26 weeks of paid maternity leave for mothers (six pre and 20 post-natal).”
  • Elfenbein, R. (2019) Engendering Revolution: Women, Unpaid Labor, and Maternalism in Bolivarian Venezuela. 1st edition. [Online]. Austin: University of Texas Press.[3]
  • Chapter 6 examines the feminist movements that influenced the development of Venezuela’s 2012 Organic Labour Law. It is peer reviewed and published by a University Press, which makes it a credible source. The sources provides valuable factual information about women’s organisations contribution to the gender related provisions within the Law.
  • ELFENBEIN, RACHEL. “Toward Feminist Socialism?: Gender, Sexuality, Popular Power, and the State in Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution.” In Seeking Rights from the Left: Gender, Sexuality, and the Latin American Pink Tide, edited by ELISABETH JAY FRIEDMAN, 200–234. Duke University Press, 2018. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv11sms57.11.[4]
  • This book is published by a University Press and is a peer reviewed academic volume, so it should be a reliable source. Rachel Elfenbein’s expertise in gender and Venezuelan politics adds to its credibility as a reliable source.Chapter 6  is useful for understanding the broader context of the feminist movement in Venezuela both before and after 2012 Organic Labour Law was passed. It helps establish the Law’s significance within the feminist framework and notability by providing facts about gender equality within politics. For example, Elfenbein notes that ”Women’s rights activists and organisations observed somewhere between an 86 percent and a 96 percent archival or dismissal rate of VAW charges in 2009” (pg.215).

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