![]() This analytic strategy highlights how policies represent the “problems” they purport to address and how governing takes place through these problematizations (see Introducing WPR). ![]() Same difference: Feminism and sexual difference (Sydney, Allen & Unwin, 1990), The Politics of Affirmative Action: “Women”, Equality and Category Politics (London, Sage, 1996), Women, Policy and Politics: The construction of policy problems (London, Sage, 1999), Fear of Food: A Diary of Mothering (Sydney, Spinifex Press, 2003), Analysing Policy: What’s the problem represented to be? (Frenchs Forest, Pearson Education, 2009), Mainstreaming Politics: Gendering practices and feminist theory (with Joan Eveline Adelaide, University of Adelaide Press, 2010) and Poststructural Policy Analysis: A Guide to Practice (with Susan Goodwin New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2016).īacchi is best known for her approach to policy analysis called “What’s the Problem Represented to be?” or the WPR approach. Surrounded by inept or dismissive medical practitioners, struggling with sleep deprivation, and alone with her fears of her child developing ongoing problems, this book combines diary entries and personal reflections to describe a. ![]() She researches and writes primarily in feminist political theory and policy theory. Carol Bacchi tells of her battle with her baby son, and the difficulty she encountered encouraging him to eat. Carol Bacchi is Professor Emerita of Politics in the Faculty of Arts, University of Adelaide. ![]()
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