Research by Assistant Professor of Political Science and Policy Studies Liza Taylor into the democratic feminist politics of renowned feminist theorist Susan Okin has won the 鈥淧olity Prize鈥 for the best research article in 2019.
Assistant Professor of Political Science and Policy Studies, Liza Taylor, recently won the 2019 for her article reclaiming one of contemporary feminist theory鈥檚 most controversial figures, Susan Moller Okin.

The award is presented annually by the Northeastern Political Science Association to the best research article published in the previous edition of Polity, the association’s annual journal. In addition to receiving a monetary prize, Taylor receives a plaque and will be the association’s guest at its annual meeting.
Heavily criticized for imposing her liberal feminist values on women from minority cultures residing in Western democracies, Okin鈥檚 1997 essay, 鈥淚s Multiculturalism Bad for Women?鈥 is easily among the most debated essays in contemporary political theory.
In a clever wordplay that foregrounds her central argument, Taylor鈥檚 article, 鈥,鈥 excavates a democratic (rather than liberal) feminist thesis from Okin鈥檚 provocative essay. Taylor does this by revealing beneath the conspicuous and troubling 鈥渙thering鈥 language that has landed Okin in such hot waters with Third World feminists and feminists of color, an imperative to treat 鈥渃ulture鈥 as a political鈥攁s opposed to private鈥攎atter and to privilege the voices of women within minority cultures. As such, Taylor locates in Okin鈥檚 controversial essay a position against treating liberal principles as trumps over the voices of the most vulnerable, thereby exposing Okin鈥檚 democratic鈥攁s opposed to liberal鈥攍eanings.
In addition to forcefully reclaiming a much-debated article, Taylor鈥檚 findings urge contemporary political theorists in a direction that contrasts sharply with Linda Zerilli鈥檚 recent calls to 鈥渙utsider liberal judgment鈥 wherein she advocates judging minority cultures from without rather than elevating the voices of actual people within such cultures. By putting Okin鈥檚 newly exhumed democratic feminist thesis in conversation with women of color feminism, Taylor invites contemporary political theorists to consider the extent to which liberalism in the form of outsider judgment might be bad for women and to align instead with the insider democratic dialogues typical of U.S. women of color feminism in the 1980s.
Taylor鈥檚 article, 鈥淚s Liberalism Bad for Women? Reclaiming Susan Okin鈥檚 Democratic Feminist Thesis,鈥 was published by Polity in April 2019 and was awarded the prize this past month.