Wages for Housework and Social Reproduction: A Microsyllabus – The Abusable Past
sarah_cowan_ on Twitter: "Wages for Housework, the 70s feminist campaign for compensation for housework and childcare, led by Silvia Federici https://t.co/yW9WqNDVi5" / Twitter
The Lockdown Showed How the Economy Exploits Women. She Already Knew. - The New York Times
Wages for Housework and Social Reproduction: A Microsyllabus – The Abusable Past
Wages for Housework
Suzy Homemaker Fights For Woman Equality: Equal Pay | Topic
Silvia Federici: Re-Enchanting the World – Food[at]Tufts
Counter-Planning From The Kitchen: Wages for Housework, A Perspective on Capital and the Left by COX, Nicole and Silvia Federici | Search for rare books | ABAA
Amazon.com: Wages for Housework: 9781570272844: Silvia Federici: Libros
federici-wages-against-housework
The Factory in the Family – U.S. Solidarity Economy Network
Counter-Planning from the Kitchen - Nicole Cox and Silvia Federici | libcom.org
Wages Against Housework- Silvia Federici – wordsforthought5
The Women of Wages for Housework | The Nation
Wages Against Housework - Silvia Federici - Google Books
The Terrain of Reproduction: Alisa Del Re's “The Sexualization of Social Relations” - Viewpoint Magazine
Wages for Housework and Social Reproduction: A Microsyllabus – The Abusable Past
Wages for Housework: A Conversation with Silvia Federici – Interference Archive
MAMA
Wages Against Housework | The A Project
Wages for Housework: Silvia Federici: 9781570272844: Amazon.com: Books
Wages Without Work: Revolution at Point Zero Review in Red Pepper Magazine - PM Press
Wages Against Housework by Silvia Federici | Goodreads
Silvia Federici reflects on Wages for Housework : New Frame
WOMENSART on Twitter: "International Wages For Housework campaign poster with manifesto demanding the state recognise and economically reward the often invisible work of women. The International Feminist Collective launched the campaign in
Permanent Reproductive Crisis»: An Interview with Silvia Federici
Silvia Federici Sees Your Unpaid Work | The New Republic