Maxine Molyneux (born 24 May 1948 in Karachi, Pakistan) is a sociologist whose work focuses on the women's movement.
That women's interests and gender interests are different categories is the discovery for which Maxine Molyneux is most frequently cited. Her focus is women's movements and her central question is how they and the state influence each other. Interests and law are the categories under which she examines the changeable and shapeable relationship of the gender order and the state. She wants to bring back the state and the political subject into the thinking on modernisation, democratisation and development.
Molyneux studied sociology at the University of Essex and is now Professor of Sociology and Director of the Institute for the Study of the Americas, School of Advanced Study, University of London. Her research, as well the influential distinction between gender needs and interests, deals with such subjects as society and development, poverty and social inequality, and gender and politics in Latin America. She is also a consultant to several United Nations organisations, as well as to Oxfam and other NGOs. As co-founder in 1979 of the noted magazine Feminist Review and an editor of the magazine Economy and Society, she is involved in the further development of debates on theory.
See her homepage: http://www.americas.sas.ac.uk/about/maxine.html
Molyneux was formerly married to Professor Fred Halliday; the couple had a son.[1]
Molyneux has written extensively in the fields of political sociology and gender and development studies. She is the author among others of:
She has co-authored:
She is co-editor of: