BasuAmrita. 1998. “Hindu Women's Activism in India and the Questions it Raises.” Pp. 167–84 in Appropriating Gender: Women's Activism and Politicized Religion in South Asia, edited by JefferyP.BasuA.. New YorkRoutledge.
2.
ButaliaUrvashi. 2000. The Other Side of Silence: Voices from the Partition of India.Durham, NCDuke University Press.
3.
DatarChhaya, ed. 1993. Struggle Against Violence.Calcutta, IND: Stree Publishers.
4.
DesaiManisha. 1996. “Informal Organizations as Agents of Change: Notes from the Contemporary Women's Movement in India.”Mobilization1: 159–73.
5.
DesaiNeera, ed. 1988. A Decade of Women's Movement in India.New Delhi: Himalaya Publishing.
6.
DesaiNeeraPatelVibhuti. 1985. Indian Women: Change and Challenge in the International Decade, 1975–85.Bombay, IND: Popular Prakashan.
7.
DietrichGabriele. 1992. Reflections on the Women's Movement in India: Religion, Ecology, Development.New Delhi, IND: Horizon India Books.
JosephAmmu. 1995. “Against All Odds.”The Hindu, September 10, 1995.
10.
KaratBrinda. 1997. “The Multiple Struggles of Women.”FrontlineVol. 14, no. 19.
11.
KumarRadha. 1993. The History of Doing: An Illustrated Account of Movements for Women's Rights and Feminism in India, 1800–1990.New Delhi: Kali for Women.
12.
MenonRitu. 2001. “Dismantling the Master's House …: the Predicament of Feminist Publishing and Writing Today.”Australian Feminist Studies, 16(35): 175–84.
13.
MenonRitu. 2000. “Structured Silences of Women.”Economic and Political Weekly, April 29, pp. WS-3–WS-6.
14.
MohantyManoranjan. 1999. “Foreign Contributions to Voluntary Organizations in India.” In Cross-Border Philanthropy: An Exploratory Study of International Giving in the U.K., U.S., Germany, and Japan, edited by AnheierH. K.ListR.. London: CAF.
15.
OmvedtGail. 1993. Reinventing Revolution: New Social Movements and the Socialist Tradition in India.London: East Gate.
16.
PhadkeShilpa. 2003. “Thirty Years On: Women's Studies Reflects on the Women's Movement.”Economic and Political Weekly, October 25, pp. 4567–76.
17.
PurkayasthaBandanaSubramaniamMangala, eds. 2004. The Power of Informal Networks. Lessons in Social Change from South Asia and West Africa.Lantham, MD: Lexington Books.
18.
RayRakaKortewegA.C.1999. “Women's Movements in the Third World: Identity, Mobilization, and Autonomy.”Annual Review of Sociology25: 47–71.
19.
RegeSharmila. 2003. “More than Just Tacking Women on to the ‘Macropicture’: Feminist Contributions to Globalisation Discourses.”Economic and Political Weekly, October 25, pp. 4555–63.
20.
SarkarTanikaButaliaUrvashi, eds. 1995Women and the Hindu Right.London: Zed Books; New Delhi: Kali for Women.
21.
SenGitaCorreaSonia. 2000. “Gender Justice and Economic Justice—Reflections on the Five Year Reviews of the UN Conferences of the 1990s.”Paper prepared for UNIFEM in preparation for the five-year review of the Beijing Platform of Action.
22.
SenGitaGrownKaren. 1987. Development, Crisis, and Alternative Visions: Third World Women's Perspectives.New York: Monthly Review Press.
23.
SenIlina. 1990. A Space Within the Struggle: Women's Participation in People's MovementNew Delhi: Kali for Women.
24.
SharmaKumud. 2003. “Institutionalising Feminist Agenda(s).”Economic and Political Weekly, October 25, pp. 4564–66.
25.
SubramaniamMangala. 2001. “Translating participation in informal organizations into empowerment: women in rural India.” Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT.
26.
SubramaniamMangalaGupteManjushaMitraDebarashmi. 2003. “Local to Global: Transnational Networks and Indian Women's Grassroots Organizing,”Mobilization8: 253–70.