Feminist scholarship seeks to identify and purge androcentric bias in
traditional disciplines, to reshape dominant paradigms so that women's
needs, interests, activities, and concerns can be analyzed and unders
tood systematically, and to develop research methodologies that are ne
ither gender-biased nor gender-blind. This essay provides an overview
of feminist scholarship in the field of policy studies. In particular,
it considers feminist studies of substantive policy domains and of th
e policy-making process, as well as feminist critiques of research par
adigms, methods, and results that have structured policy studies for t
he past 50 years.