Revolutionary Feminisms. Brenna Bhandar

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      Professor Emerita of Sociology at Birkbeck, University of London, Avtar Brah has taught at the University of Leicester and the Open University. She specialises in the study of race, gender, class, ethnicity, and diaspora, where she explores the intersections within and across these axes of power in a variety of contexts. Her work has been influential within the academy, feminist movements and diasporic communities, from organising as one of the founding members of Southall Black Sisters to roles in campaigns against racist violence. Her political activism is deeply marked by a socialist, feminist and anti-imperialist, decolonial optic. She was centrally involved in the mobilisation of solidarity politics when Asian and Afro-Caribbean groups organised jointly under the common sign of Black as a political colour. She was active within the Organisation of Women of African and Asian Descent. For a period during the early 1980s, she took up a post as Head of Resources within the Women’s Committee Support Unit at the Greater London Council, which, as she recalls, was ‘a left project, sometimes dubbed as an experiment in “municipal socialism”’.

      Her pioneering book Cartographies of Diaspora: Contesting Identities (1996) helped generate new perspectives in the study of diaspora as a concept and as a practice. Together with Annie Coombes, she edited Hybridity and Its Discontents: Politics, Science, Culture (2000). She worked with Mary Hickman and Máirtín Mac an Ghail in coediting two volumes: Thinking Identities: Racism, Ethnicity and Culture (1999), and Global Futures: Migration, Environment and Globalization (1999). For a number of years, she served as a member of the editorial collective of Critical Social Policy and the editorial board of Ethnic and Racial Studies. She is a member of the editorial collective of Feminist Review and of the international editorial board of Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power.

      BB/RZ Through several decades of meticulously grounded research, you have devised a methodological approach that reworks

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