Margaret Perez Brower is an Assistant Professor of Political Science and Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Washington. Her work focuses on the politics of race, ethnicity, and gender and how these politics shape US institutions, advocacy, policymaking, and social movements.
'Intersectional Advocacy is a rare scholarly jewel forged from the combined power of rigorous, multi-method empirical analyses and careful, theoretically grounded thinking. Brower crafts a narrative that is at once rooted in deep knowledge of policy processes and centered on organizations struggling to change policy and build a more just world. Intersectional Advocacy offers crucial insights for scholars and practitioners seeking to understand and transform the structure, constraints, and possibilities of policymaking in the context of multiple, enduring, interlocking systems of oppression.' Jamila Michener, Cornell University 'In this powerful and important book, Perez Brower uses a multimethod approach grounded in experiences of intersectional advocates as well as social scientific analysis of hypotheticals to draw conclusions about the real and potential impact of intersectional advocacy. She shows the way that intersectional advocates highlight linkages between issues where traditional or single-issue policy advocacy failed to make connections. By making these linkages, advocates transform or 'reconfigure' the policy function of the state, fundamentally altering power dynamics. The book not only deepens our theoretical understanding of intersectional advocacy, but also offers lessons for those who want to advance change and improve policy responses to gender-based violence. Engagingly written and passionate in its commitments, the book is must-read for all scholars of policymaking, especially those wishing to understand gender-based violence and/or the substantive representation of marginalized groups in the United States.' S. Laurel Weldon, Simon Fraser University 'Perez Brower's book powerfully demonstrates how public policies, even progressive legislation intending to combat violence against women, enact inequalities, and identifies policy boundaries as a new mechanism connecting social policies to unequal outcomes. Policies that are conceptualized and designed for more privileged members of social groups, such as white women, may benefit some women while producing greater injustices in the lives of more marginal group members, such as women of color and immigrant women. Brower shows that the strategic interventions of civic movements - which she calls intersectional advocates - compelled members of Congress to reform the Violence Against Women Act to serve the needs of underprivileged women. Intersectional advocates succeeded by breaking policy boundaries to link violence against women to welfare policies, immigration policies, and tribal law. This superb book sets the agenda for future research on American political development, social policy, and progressive activism.' Mala Htun, University of New Mexico