The six previous special issues of the Review are analyzed both as texts that illuminate the concerns of specific historical moments and as part of the ongoing development of feminist political economy. Over the course of these issues, the diversity of women's experiences forms a basis for critiques of existing theory and the development of feminist analytical constructs.
Acker, J. (2000). Revisiting class: thinking from gender, race, and organizations. Social Politics, 7 (2), 192-214.
2.
Albelda, R. (1985). "Nice work if you can get it": segmentation of white and black women workers in the post-war period. Review of Radical Political Economics, 17 (3), 72-85.
3.
Albers, P. C. (1985). Autonomy and dependency in the lives of Dakota women: a study in historical change. Review of Radical Political Economics, 17 (3), 109-134.
4.
Balakrishnan, R., & Nisonoff, L. (1991). RRPE special issue: introduction. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), iv-vi.
5.
Bambirra, V. (1972). Women's liberation and class struggle. Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), 75-84.
6.
Barnett, H. (1976). The political economy of rape and prostitution. Review of Radical Political Economics, 8 (1), 59-68.
7.
Barrett, M. (1988, 1980). Women's oppression today: the Marxist/feminist encounter. London: Verso.
8.
Benería, L. (1976). Women's participation in paid production under capitalism: the Spanish experience. Review of Radical Political Economics, 8 (1), 18-33.
9.
Benerfa, L. (1995). Towards a greater integration of gender and economics. World Development, 23 (11), 1839-1850.
10.
Benston, M. (1997, 1969). The political economy of women's liberation. In R. Hennessy & C. Ingraham (Eds.), Materialist feminism: a reader in class, difference, and women's lives (pp. 17-23). New York: Routledge.
11.
Berch, B. (1984). "The sphinx in the household": a new look at the history of household workers. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 105-120.
12.
Bolles, A. L. (1991). Surviving Manley and Seaga: case studies of women's responses to structural adjustment policies. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), 20-36.
13.
Bryson, V. (1999). Feminist debates: issues of theory and political practice. New York: New York University Press.
14.
Ciancanelli, P. (1980). Exchange, reproduction and sex subordination among the Kikuyu of East Africa. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 25-36.
15.
Dalla Costa, M., & James, S. (1997 [1972]). Women and the subversion of the community. In R. Hennessy & C. Ingraham (Eds.), Material feminism: a reader in class, difference, and women's lives (pp. 40-53). New York: Routledge.
16.
Dalsimer, M., & Nisonoff, L.(1984). The new economic readjustment policies: implications for Chinese urban working women. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 17-43.
17.
Deere, C. D. (1976). Rural women's subsistence production in the capitalist periphery. Review of Radical Political Economics, 8 (1), 9-17.
18.
Diamant, S. (1972). Black and white women: a seminar in inter-racial perspectives. Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), 142-148.
19.
Diamant, S., Rosenberg, J., & Graetz, S. (1972). Note [preface]. Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), iv-iv.
20.
Emadi, H. (1991). State, modernization and the women's movement in Afghanistan. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4): 224-243.
21.
Enloe, C. (1980). Women-the reserve army of labor. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 52-52.
22.
Fee, T. (1976). Domestic labor: an analysis of housework and its relation to the production process. Review of Radical Political Economics, 8 (1), 1-8.
23.
Ferber, M. A., & Nelson, J. A. (1993). Beyond economic man: feminist theory and economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
24.
Fine, B. (1992). Women's employment and the capitalist family. London: Routledge.
25.
Fleck, S. (1999). Union for Radical Political Economics. In P. A. O'Hara (Ed.), Encyclopedia of political economy (pp. 1200-1203). London: Routledge.
26.
Floro, M. S. (1991). Market orientation and the reconstitution of women's role in Philippine agriculture. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), 106-128.
27.
Folbre, N. (1980a). Introduction. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 1-3.
28.
Folbre, N. (1980b). Patriarchy in colonial New England. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 4-13.
29.
Folbre, N. (1987). A patriarchal mode of production. In R. Albelda, C. Gunn, & W. Waller (Eds.), Alternatives to economic orthodoxy (pp. 323-338). Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe.
30.
Folbre, N. (1994). Who pays for the kids? Gender and the structures of constraint. London: Routledge.
31.
Folbre, N. (1995). "Holding hands at midnight": the paradox of caring labor. Feminist Economics, 1 (1), 73-92.
32.
Frader, L. L. (1998). Bringing political economy back in: gender, culture, race, and class in labor history. Social Science History, 22 (1), 7-18.
33.
Gardiner, J. (1975). Women's domestic labour. New Left Review, (89), 47-58.
34.
Glazer, N. Y. (1984). Servants to capital: unpaid domestic labor and paid work. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 61-87.
35.
Glenn, E. N. (1985). Racial ethnic women's labor: the intersection of race, gender, and class oppression. Review of Radical Political Economics, 17 (3), 86-108.
36.
Glenn, E. N. (1992). From servitude to service work: historical continuities in the racial division of paid reproductive labor. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 18 (1), 1-43.
37.
Goldberg, M. P. (1972). Women in the Soviet economy. Review of Radical Political Economics,4 (3), 60-74.
38.
Gottlieb, R. (1984). The political economy of sexuality. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 143-165.
39.
Hartmann, H. (1976). Capitalism, patriarchy, and job segregation by sex. Signs: A Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 1 (3), 137-169.
40.
Hartmann, H. (1981 [1979]). The unhappy marriage of Marxism and feminism: towards a more progressive union. In L. Sargent (Ed.), Women and revolution: a discussion of the unhappy marriage of Marxism and feminism. Boston: South End Press.
41.
Hartmann, H. I., & Markusen, A. R. (1980). Contemporary Marxist theory and practice: a feminist critique. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 87-93.
42.
Hewitson, G. J. (1999). Feminist economics: interrogating the masculinity of rational economic man. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
43.
Himmeiweit, S. (1984). The real dualism of sex and class. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 167-183.
44.
Himmeiweit, S. (1995). The discovery of "unpaid work": the social consequences of the expansion of "work."Feminist Economics, 1 (2), 1-19.
45.
Himmelweit, S., & Mohun, S. (1977). Domestic labour and capital. Cambridge Journal of Economics, 1 (1), 15-31.
46.
Hochschild, A. R. (1983). The managed heart: commercialization of human feeling. Berkeley: University of California Press.
47.
Humphries, J. (1976). Women: scapegoats and safety valves in the great depression. Review of Radical Political Economics, 8 (1), 98-121.
48.
Humphries, J. (1977). The working class family, women's liberation, and class struggle: the case of nineteenth century British history. Review of Radical Political Economics, 9 (3), 25-41.
49.
Humphries, J. (1980). An open letter to the RRPE special issue on women collective. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 94-94.
50.
Humphries, J. (1983). The "emancipation" of women in the 1970s and 1980s: from the latent to the floating. Capital and Class, (20), 6-28.
51.
Humphries, J. (1991). The sexual division of labor and social control: an interpretation. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3 & 4), 269-296.
52.
Introduction. (1984). Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1).
53.
Janiewski, D. (1991). Southern honor, southern dishonor: managerial ideology and the construction of gender, race, and class relations in southern industry. In A. Baron (Ed.), Work engendered: toward a new history of American labor. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
54.
Katz, E. (1991). Breaking the myth of harmony: theoretical and methodological guidelines to the study of rural third world households. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3 & 4), 37-56.
55.
Koopman, J. (1991). Neo-classical household models and modes of household production: problems in the analysis of African agricultural households. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), 148-173.
56.
Laslett, B., & Brenner, J. (1989). Gender and social reproduction: historical perspectives. Annual Review of Sociology, 15, 381-404.
57.
Madden, J. F. (1972). The development of economic thought on the "woman problem."Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), 21-39.
58.
Markusen, A. (1977). Feminist notes on introductory economics. Review of Radical Political Economics, 9 (3), 1-6.
59.
Maurer, B. (1991). Symbolic sexuality and economic work in Dominica, West Indies: the naturalization of sex and women's work in development. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), 1-19.
60.
McAllister, C. (1991). Uneven and combined development: dynamics of change and women's everyday forms of resistance in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), 57-98.
61.
McCrate, E. (1987). Trade, merger, and employment: economic theory on marriage. Review of Radical Political Economics, 19 (1), 73-89.
62.
Milkman, R. (1976). Women's work and the economic crisis: some lessons from the great depression. Review of Radical Political Economics, 8 (1), 73-97.
63.
Miller, J. A. (1990). Women's unemployment patterns in postwar business cycles: class difference, the gender segregation of work and deindustrialization. Review of Radical Political Economics, 22 (4), 87-110.
64.
Moghissi, H. (1991). Women, modernization and revolution in Iran. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (3-4), 205-223.
65.
Molyneux, M. (1979). Beyond the domestic labour debate. New Left Review, (116), 3-27.
66.
Muller, V. (1977). The formation of the state and the oppression of women: some theoretical considerations and a case study in England and Wales. Review of Radical Political Economics, 9 (3), 7-21.
67.
Mutari, E. (1996). Women's employment patterns during the interwar period: a comparison of two states. Feminist Economics, 2 (2), 107-127.
68.
Nicholson, L. J. (1990). Feminism/postmodernism. New York: Routledge.
69.
Nisonoff, L. (1993). URPE and the review of radical political economics. Unpublished paper.
70.
Ortner, S. B. (1996). Making gender: the politics and erotics of culture. Boston: Beacon Press.
71.
Power, M. (1983). From home production to wage labor: women as a reserve army of labor. Review of Radical Political Economics, 15 (1), 71-91.
72.
Quick, P. (1972). Women's work. Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), 2-19.
73.
Quick, P. (1977). The class nature of women's oppression. Review of Radical Political Economics, 9 (3), 42-53.
74.
Reskin, B. (1984). Sex segregation in the workplace: trends, explanations, remedies. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
75.
Rose, S. O. (1998). Resuscitating class. Social Science History, 22 (1), 19-27.
76.
Rosenberg, J. (1972). A review of the role of women in modern economic life. Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), 124-125.
77.
Rubery, J. (1988). Women and recession. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
78.
Rubin, G. (1975). The traffic in women: notes on the "political economy" of sex. In R. Reiter (Ed.), Toward an anthropology of women. New York: Monthly Review Press.
79.
Sargent, L. (1981). Women and revolution: a discussion of the unhappy marriage of Marxism and feminism. Boston: South End Press.
80.
Scott, J. W. (1988). Gender and the politics of history. New York: Columbia University Press.
81.
Seccombe, W. (1974). The housewife and her labour under capitalism. New Left Review, (83), 3-24.
82.
Sedghi, H. (1980). An assessment of works in Farsi and English on Iran and Iranian women: 1900-1977. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 37-41.
83.
Seiz, J. A. (1991). The bargaining approach and feminist methodology. Review of Radical Political Economics, 23 (1/2), 22-29.
84.
Sen, G. (1980). The sexual division of labor and the working-class family: towards a conceptual synthesis of class relations and the subordination of women. Review of Radical Political Economics, 12 (2), 76-86.
85.
Sen, G. (1984). Subordination and sexual control: a comparative view of the control of women. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 133-142.
86.
Squires, J. (1999). Gender in political theory. Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press.
87.
Steinberg, R. J., & Figart, D. M. (1999). Emotional labor in the service economy. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 561-561.
88.
Strober, M. H. (1994). Rethinking economics through a feminist lens. American Economic Review, 84 (2), 143-147.
89.
Trey, J. E. (1972). Women in the war economy. Review of Radical Political Economics, 4 (3), 40-57.
90.
Turbin, C. (1984). Reconceptualizing family, work, and labor organizing: working women in Troy, 1860-1890. Review of Radical Political Economics, 16 (1), 1-16.
91.
Vogel, L. (1995). Woman questions: essays for a materialist feminism. London: Pluto Press.