Maryse Gaudier, Women in the 1980-95 Period: Constraints and Opportunities, Geneva: Institut international d'etudes sociales, Série bibliographique no. 18, 1997, 22.50 Swiss francs, xvii1196 pp.
Teresa Rees, Mainstreaming Equality in the European Union: Education, Training and Labour Market Policies, London: Routledge, 1998, £45.00, paper £14.99, xix1260 pp.
Jill Rubery, Mark Smith, Colette Fagan and Damian Grimshaw, Women and European Employment, London: Routledge, 1998, £50.00, xvii1351 pp.
Each of these books examines the situation of women from a different
perspective and asks different questions. Gaudier is primarily concerned
with what women themselves are doing and writing; Rees has made a
detailed examination of policy making on education and training at the EU
level; Rubery et al. are concerned with every aspect of women's position in
European labour markets. All are studies which go beyond individual
nation states, taking either an international or a European perspective. All
are also in some sense reference books as well as texts in that they have
useful discreet sections of information or analysis which can be easily
accessed. They deal predominantly with the period 1980-1995 and taken
together provide some important insights into the complex and contradictory
processes which create ‘women's situation’ in the nineties.