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15 June 2026
16:45 – 18:15 BST
Newcastle University
Frederick Douglass Centre Lecture Threatre
Mona Lena Krook
Rutgers University
Feminist politics – and political science – are currently under attack around the world, as anti-gender actors target feminist politicians, policies, experts, and academics. Yet our community of researchers and practitioners has never been larger or more connected. Knowledge of gender has also never been more relevant for grasping the forces at the heart of contemporary politics.
How do we protect our gains – and even make further advances in gender equality? In the face of backlash, we need to take action, both individually and collectively, to retain and defend the concept of gender, as well as to challenge patriarchy as a system of oppression.
Anti-gender efforts to erase decades of research and activism are themselves a sign that this work has had a powerful and important impact on politics and society. Fighting back requires learning from the anti-gender playbook, while also remaining true to a radical and inclusive vision of feminist politics.
Mona Lena Krook is Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Chair of the Women & Politics Program at Rutgers University. She is the author of Quotas for Women in Politics (2009), Violence against Women in Politics (2020), and Elect Women for a Change: The Path to Gender Parity in Politics (2026).
Alongside her scholarly work, she has advised international organisations, governments, and activists around the world on strategies to promote women in politics. Her most recent publication is an interview series in Politics & Gender on the dismantling of U.S. government work on gender and democracy and women, peace, and security.