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by Serene J. Khader (Author)
Women and other oppressed and deprived people sometimes collude with the forces that perpetuate injustice against them. Women's acceptance of their lesser claim on household resources like food, their positive attitudes toward clitoridectemy and infibulations, their acquiescence to violence at the hands of their husbands, and their sometimes fatalistic attitudes toward their own poverty or suffering are all examples of "adaptive preferences," wherein women participate in their own deprivation.
Serene Khader is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Stony Brook University. She is also a women's rights activist who has worked in both national and international contexts, and her activist experience informs her philosophical work.
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