Phone: +361/327-3034    Fax: +361/327-3296    Email: gender@ceu.hu

ÉVA FODOR

Eva Fodor

Associate Professor Director of Doctoral Studies

Contact:

Email: Fodore(at)ceu.hu
Office: Zrinyi 14. room 507/B
Phone: (36-1) 327-3000 ext. 2077
Fax: (36-1) 327-3296


read full cv here

Education:

Ph.D. in Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1997.
B.A. in English, History, and Sociology, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, 1990.

Research Areas:

Social inequalities, Gender and work, Poverty and welfare, Gender Policy

Selected Publications

Eva Fodor and Eszter Varsa. 2009.
“At the Crossroads of East an West: Gender Studies in Hungary”“ in Christine Bose and Minjeong Kim (eds). Global Persepctives on Gender Research: Transnational Perspectives. New York, London: Routledge. link here

Eva Fodor. 2009.
“Women and Political Engagement in East Central Europe” pp. 112-129, in Anne Marie Goetz (ed.) Governing Women: Women’s Political Effectiveness in Contexts of Democratization and Governance Reform. New York, London: Routledge.

Eva Fodor and Christy Glass. 2007.
“From Public to Private Maternalism? Gender and Welfare in Poland and Hungary after 1989” Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State and and Society, 14:323-350. link here

Eva Fodor. 2006.
“A Different Type of Gender Gap: How Women and Men Experience Poverty.” East European Politics and Societies. Vol 11, 3 (Fall): 470-500. link here

Anna Pollert and Eva Fodor (eds). 2005.
Working Conditions and Gender in an Enlarged Europe. Report commissioned by the European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions. link here

Eva Fodor. 2004.
“The State Socialist Emancipation Project: Gender Inequality in Hungary and Austria.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 29 (3) 783-815.

Eva Fodor. 2003.
“Working Difference: Women’s Working Lives in Hungary and Austria, 1945-1995.” Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
link here

Eva Fodor, editor. 2002.
“Gender and the Experience of Poverty in Eastern Europe and Russia After 1989.” A special issue of the journal Communist and Post-Communist Studies. (December 2002:35)