Intersectionality in Sociology: Theoretical Origins & Modern Applications

Go beyond additive models of oppression. Explore the definitive sociology module on Intersectionality, featuring deep dives into the Matrix of Domination and the "Road Intersection" metaphor. Analyze how overlapping identities—race, class, disability, and sexuality—shape unique experiences of power and privilege.

Intersectionality: Complete Academic Module for Sociology Students | IASNOVA.COM
Academic Module · Sociology

Inter­sectionality

The framework that transformed sociology — examining how race, gender, class, sexuality and disability intersect to create distinct experiences of power and oppression.

Feminist Theory Race & Ethnicity Social Inequality Critical Theory Social Movements
1989Year Coined
10Key Thinkers
6Identity Axes
5Applications
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01 — Overview IASNOVA.COM

What Is Intersectionality?

Intersectionality is one of the most important theoretical contributions in 20th-century social science. It challenges us to see identity not as a list of separate characteristics but as a web of mutually constitutive relationships that together shape a person’s position in society.

Core Definition

Intersectionality is a theoretical and methodological framework asserting that social identity categories — race, gender, class, sexuality, disability, nationality, religion and age — do not operate independently but interact simultaneously to produce distinct, qualitatively unique experiences of privilege and oppression that cannot be understood by examining any single category alone.

Crenshaw (1989, 1991); Collins (1990)

The Core InsightBeyond “Adding” Identities

Before intersectionality, social analysis often treated identity categories as additive. Intersectionality argues this is fundamentally wrong — a Black woman does not experience racism then sexism in sequence. She experiences a qualitatively distinct form of power relation that cannot be understood by studying Black men or white women separately.

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The Key MetaphorRoad Intersection

Crenshaw’s original metaphor: imagine a road intersection. Traffic flows in multiple directions simultaneously. When someone is injured at that intersection, it may be impossible to determine which direction the harm came from. Anti-discrimination law was designed to address only single-directional traffic, leaving those at the intersection without legal protection.

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Learning Objectives

1. Define intersectionality
Articulate Crenshaw’s original definition and distinguish it from additive models of oppression.
2. Trace its origins
Situate intersectionality within Black feminist thought and critical legal studies.
3. Apply key frameworks
Use Collins’ Matrix of Domination and the concept of interlocking oppressions.
4. Identify key thinkers
Engage with Crenshaw, Collins, hooks, Lorde, Davis, Anzaldúa and others.
5. Apply to institutions
Analyse criminal justice, healthcare, education and the labour market intersectionally.
6. Evaluate critically
Assess conceptual debates, methodological challenges and political critiques.
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02 — Origins & History IASNOVA.COM

The Origins of Intersectionality

Intersectionality did not emerge from abstract theorising. It grew from the concrete political and legal struggles of Black women who found themselves invisible in both feminist and civil rights movements.

The Founding Moment — 1989

Kimberlé Crenshaw published “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex” in the University of Chicago Legal Forum. She analysed three legal cases where Black women sued for discrimination — and lost — because courts required them to separate their race claims from their gender claims, even though their actual experience was shaped by both simultaneously.

1851
Sojourner Truth — “Ain’t I a Woman?”
Proto-intersectional speech exposing how white feminist discourse excluded Black women. Demonstrates that “woman” as a category assumed whiteness.
1977
Combahee River Collective Statement
Black lesbian feminist organisation explicitly names the simultaneous oppressions of race, sex, heterosexism, and class — a direct precursor to intersectionality.
1981
Angela Davis — Women, Race & Class
Landmark analysis of how the US women’s suffrage and labour movements both systematically excluded Black women. Documents the historical roots of interlocking oppressions.
1984
Audre Lorde — Sister Outsider
Critiques white feminism’s refusal to engage with race. Lorde argues that difference — race, sexuality, class — is a source of strength, not division.
1989
Kimberlé Crenshaw coins “intersectionality”
Published in the University of Chicago Legal Forum. Shows how General Motors’ layoffs devastated Black women who fell through the gap between race and sex discrimination law.
1990
Patricia Hill Collins — Black Feminist Thought
Develops the Matrix of Domination — the most systematic theoretical elaboration of intersectionality. Introduces four domains of power and the concept of “outsider-within” standpoints.
1991
Crenshaw — “Mapping the Margins”
Extends intersectionality to political and structural dimensions. Still the most cited article in intersectionality studies. Applies the framework to violence against women of colour.
2000s–present
Global spread & institutionalisation
Intersectionality spreads into European sociology, EU gender mainstreaming policy, healthcare research, education studies, and social movements worldwide.
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“The most general statement of our politics at the present time would be that we are actively committed to struggling against racial, sexual, heterosexual, and class oppression and see as our particular task the development of integrated analysis and practice based upon the fact that the major systems of oppression are interlocking.” — Combahee River Collective Statement, 1977
03 — Key Thinkers IASNOVA.COM

The Scholars Who Built the Field

Intersectionality is rooted in Black feminist intellectual tradition. These are the essential voices every sociology student must engage with seriously.

KC
Kimberlé Crenshaw
1959– · USA
Founder of Intersectionality
Black feminist legal scholar who coined the term in 1989 to critique how anti-discrimination law failed Black women. Her two landmark papers (1989, 1991) remain the most cited works in the field. Also co-founder of Critical Race Theory.
Key works: “Demarginalizing the Intersection” (1989); “Mapping the Margins” (1991)
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PHC
Patricia Hill Collins
1948– · USA
Matrix of Domination
Sociologist who developed the most comprehensive theoretical framework for intersectionality. Her Matrix of Domination models how race, class, and gender form an interlocking system of power across four domains. Former President of the ASA.
Key works: Black Feminist Thought (1990); Intersectionality as Critical Social Theory (2019)
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bell hooks
1952–2021 · USA
Feminist Cultural Critic
Cultural theorist who critiqued mainstream (white, bourgeois) feminism for marginalising race and class. Her concept of “imperialist white supremacist capitalist patriarchy” captures intersecting systems of domination in a single phrase.
Key works: Ain’t I a Woman (1981); Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (1984)
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AL
Audre Lorde
1934–1992 · USA
Poet-Scholar
Black lesbian feminist poet and essayist who theorised difference as a source of strength rather than division. Her essay “The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House” (1984) is foundational to intersectional feminist thought.
Key works: Sister Outsider (1984); Zami: A Biomythography (1982)
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Angela Davis
1944– · USA
Prison Abolitionist
Activist-scholar whose historical analysis of race, class, and gender in the US labour and women’s movements predates the term intersectionality but embodies its logic. Central figure in prison abolition and Critical Race Theory.
Key works: Women, Race & Class (1981); Are Prisons Obsolete? (2003)
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GA
Gloria Anzaldúa
1942–2004 · USA
Borderlands Theorist
Chicana feminist theorist who developed the concept of the “borderlands” — physical and psychic spaces where multiple, often contradictory identities coexist. Expanded intersectionality to include nationality, language, and colonial history.
Key works: Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987)
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AH
Ange-Marie Hancock
1972– · USA
Research Paradigm Scholar
Political scientist who provided the first systematic analysis of intersectionality as a research paradigm. Distinguished between intersectionality as a framework, a methodology, and a political project. Key critic of how the term has been co-opted.
Key works: Intersectionality: An Intellectual History (2016)
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LM
Leslie McCall
1964– · USA
Quantitative Methods
Sociologist who addressed the methodological challenge of doing intersectional research. Identified three approaches: anticategorical, intracategorical, and intercategorical — now the standard methodological typology in the field.
Key works: “The Complexity of Intersectionality” (2005, Signs)
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04 — Core Concepts IASNOVA.COM

Essential Concepts to Master

These are the key theoretical building blocks all students of intersectionality must understand and be able to apply in analysis and essay writing.

Interlocking Systems
Race, class, and gender are not separate but mutually constitutive — each shapes how the others operate. Racism is always gendered; sexism is always racialised.
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Simultaneity
Identities are experienced simultaneously, not sequentially. A Black queer working-class woman inhabits all her identities at once — they shape each other in every interaction.
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Matrix of Domination
Collins’ framework showing how power operates across structural, disciplinary, hegemonic, and interpersonal domains. Everyone occupies both privilege and oppression simultaneously.
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Standpoint Epistemology
Knowledge is socially situated. Those at the margins hold “outsider-within” standpoints that provide distinctive epistemic insights unavailable to those at the centre of power.
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Structural vs Political
Crenshaw distinguishes structural intersectionality (material conditions) from political intersectionality (how identity politics can silence those at the intersection).
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Relational Privilege
No one is simply privileged or oppressed — everyone occupies a complex location. Privilege and oppression along different axes co-exist, not cancel each other out.
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Additive vs Intersectional Analysis

DimensionAdditive ModelIntersectional Model
LogicIdentities stack: disadvantage + disadvantage = more disadvantageIdentities interact: each transforms how the others work
MetaphorBuilding blocks, layersRoad intersection, matrix, web
ExampleA Black woman faces racism + sexismA Black woman faces a qualitatively distinct form of oppression shaped by the interaction of race and gender
ResearchStudy Black people and women separately, then add findingsStudy Black women as a specific subject position; findings cannot be derived from other groups
PolicyRace policy + gender policy = adequate coverageRace + gender policy leaves Black women in a gap; must address intersectional subjects directly
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Political Intersectionality

Crenshaw’s 1991 concept of political intersectionality addresses how political movements organised around single identities can harm those at intersections by forcing them to choose between group allegiances.

The DilemmaForced Allegiance

Black women in 1970s–80s feminist movements were asked to prioritise gender over race. In civil rights organisations, to prioritise race over gender. Both demands silenced their specific experience. Neither movement spoke to or for them.

Contemporary Example#MeToo

The #MeToo movement was critiqued intersectionally for initially centring white, middle-class professional women. Women of colour, domestic workers, and undocumented migrants faced structural barriers to speaking out that the movement’s framing did not address.

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Outsider-Within

Patricia Hill Collins’ concept of outsider-within describes those who work inside institutions not designed for them — Black domestic workers in white homes, Black academics in white universities, women in male-dominated professions.

The Epistemic Advantage

Being an outsider-within gives a distinctive epistemic standpoint. Domestic workers who cleaned white homes and raised white children while being treated as invisible accumulated detailed knowledge of white family life that no white sociologist could access. Collins argues this marginal position becomes an analytical advantage — producing a more comprehensive view of social structure.

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05 — Matrix of Domination IASNOVA.COM

Collins’ Matrix of Domination

Patricia Hill Collins’ Matrix of Domination is the most systematic theoretical model in intersectionality studies. It maps how interlocking oppressions are organised across four domains of power.

The Matrix of Domination — Four Domains of Power (Collins, 1990) IASNOVA.COM
Matrix of Domination Race · Class · Gender · Sexuality Structural Domain Laws, policies, institutions Housing, healthcare, criminal justice, education Disciplinary Domain Bureaucracy, surveillance management, social work policing, standardised tests Hegemonic Domain Culture, ideology, media religion, education content normalising dominant ideas Interpersonal Domain Everyday interactions microaggressions, bias personal relationships organisational resistance individual resistance community resistance activist resistance Each domain both produces inequality AND contains sites of resistance — Collins (1990) IASNOVA.COM
Key InnovationDomains, Not Levels

Unlike earlier models that treated oppression as a hierarchy, Collins’ Matrix treats all four domains as equally real and mutually reinforcing. Changing the law (structural) without changing culture (hegemonic) and everyday interactions (interpersonal) produces limited change.

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ResistancePower and Counter-Power

Each domain also contains sites of resistance: social movements challenge the structural domain; whistleblowers challenge the disciplinary domain; counter-cultural movements challenge the hegemonic domain; everyday dignity challenges the interpersonal domain. Power and resistance are always co-present.

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06 — Axes of Identity IASNOVA.COM

The Intersecting Axes of Identity

Intersectionality examines how multiple identity dimensions simultaneously structure social experience. These are the primary axes analysed in the sociological literature.

Intersecting Axes of Identity and Power IASNOVA.COM
Social Subject Unique intersection Race & Ethnicity White · Black · Latinx Asian · Indigenous Gender & Sexuality Man · Woman · Non-binary Hetero · Gay · Bi · Trans Class Working · Middle Upper · Underclass Disability Physical · Cognitive Neurodiverse · Chronic Nationality Citizen · Migrant Refugee · Stateless Religion & Culture Christian · Muslim · Jewish Secular · Indigenous faiths Age Child · Youth Adult · Elder Body & Health Body size · Health status Mental health Each axis ranges from privilege to oppression; position varies across contexts IASNOVA.COM
Critical Note on Categories

Intersectionality does not treat these categories as fixed, natural, or discrete. They are socially constructed, historically contingent, and context-dependent. Race in the USA is constituted differently than race in Brazil or Britain. The framework requires sensitivity to how categories are constructed in specific historical and geographic contexts.

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07 — Applications IASNOVA.COM

Applying Intersectionality

Intersectionality is not merely abstract theory — it is a practical analytical tool that transforms how sociologists study institutions, policies, and social outcomes.

Criminal Justice
Race, Gender & the Carceral State
Intersectional analysis shows that Black women experience distinctive forms of criminalisation (e.g. for protecting themselves against abusive partners) that are erased when analysis focuses solely on race or gender. The “school-to-prison pipeline” operates differently for Black girls than Black boys.
Key study: Richie (1996) — “Compelled to Crime” on how race and gender intersect in women’s pathways to criminalisation
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Healthcare
Medical Racism, Gender & Class
Black women in the USA have maternal mortality rates 2–3× higher than white women regardless of education or income — a finding that only emerges when race and gender are analysed together. Pain management studies show Black patients receive less analgesia; intersectional analysis shows Black women’s pain is doubly dismissed.
Key data: CDC (2023) — Black maternal mortality; Hoffman et al. (2016) — racial bias in pain treatment
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Education
Achievement Gaps & School Discipline
Black girls are disciplined at 5.5× the rate of white girls in US schools (NWLC, 2017) — but this intersection is invisible in analyses looking at race alone (dominated by Black boys) or gender alone (dominated by white girls). Similarly, disabled students of colour face distinct exclusion patterns.
Key concept: “pushout” (Morris, 2016) — how Black girls are systematically excluded from educational spaces
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Labour Market
Pay Gaps & Workplace Inequality
In the US, white women earn ~79¢ to a white man’s dollar, but Black women earn ~63¢, Latinas ~58¢, and Native American women ~60¢. Intersectional analysis reveals “the gender pay gap” framing primarily captures white women’s inequality, obscuring deeper disadvantages faced by women of colour.
Key data: AAUW (2023) — “The Simple Truth About the Gender Pay Gap” disaggregated by race/ethnicity
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Immigration
Nationality, Race & Gender
Undocumented women of colour occupy one of the most vulnerable intersectional positions: excluded from formal labour protections (class/legal status), facing racialised immigration enforcement (race/nationality), and experiencing gendered exploitation in domestic and care labour (gender).
Key work: Parreñas (2001) — “Servants of Globalization” on Filipina migrant domestic workers
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Disability Studies
Disability Justice Framework
The disability justice movement (Sins Invalid, founded 2006) explicitly critiques mainstream disability rights for centring white, middle-class, physically disabled people. It centres those experiencing multiple oppressions simultaneously — disabled people of colour, queer disabled people, disabled people in poverty.
Key principle: “Nothing About Us Without Us” — expanded to “Nothing About Any of Us Without All of Us”
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08 — Research Methods IASNOVA.COM

Intersectional Research Methods

How do researchers actually study multiple intersecting identities simultaneously? Leslie McCall’s (2005) typology provides the key methodological framework.

ApproachMcCall’s TermLogicMethodExample
Deconstruct categoriesAnticategoricalIdentity categories are unstable constructs that should be dismantled, not studiedPoststructuralist discourse analysis, queer theoryButler’s analysis of how gender performance creates the illusion of stable categories
Focus on neglected intersectionsIntracategoricalUse a specific overlooked intersection as a lens to reveal complexity within existing categoriesQualitative, ethnographic, case-study, narrativeCrenshaw’s analysis of Black women; research on disabled LGBTQ+ youth
Measure inequality across groupsIntercategoricalProvisionally use categories to track how inequality is distributed across multiple axes simultaneouslyQuantitative, survey data, regression, interaction effectsPay gap analysis by race × gender × education
Qualitative ApproachesPrivileged in the Field
  • In-depth interviews — capture how people narrate their own intersectional experiences
  • Ethnography — observe how intersecting identities shape social interactions in context
  • Narrative/life history — trace how intersecting identities shape biographical trajectories
  • Discourse analysis — examine how identity categories are constructed in texts and media
  • Participatory action research — positions participants as co-investigators
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Researcher PositionalityThe Reflexive Requirement

Intersectional methodology requires researchers to explicitly acknowledge how their own race, gender, class, and other identities shape:

  • Which research questions are asked (and not asked)
  • Who is recruited as participants and how
  • How data is interpreted and what counts as valid knowledge
  • The power dynamics of the research relationship
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09 — Debates & Critiques IASNOVA.COM

Critical Debates

A sophisticated engagement with intersectionality requires understanding what is contested. These are the most important academic and political critiques.

The Identity Category Problem

Butler’s CritiquePerformativity

Judith Butler argues that treating race and gender as stable categories misses how those categories are themselves produced through performative repetition. “Woman” is not a pre-existing category that intersects with “Black” — both are produced through social practices that always involve race and gender simultaneously.

Alcoff’s ResponseIdentity Matters

Linda Alcoff argues that deconstructing identity categories is a political luxury only available to those not currently targeted by racism and sexism. Intersectionality can acknowledge categories are constructed while still using them as analytical tools for political purposes.

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Methodological Challenge

The Infinite Regress Problem

If identity categories multiply infinitely (race × gender × class × sexuality × disability × age × nationality …), intersectionality risks becoming analytically ungovernable. How do researchers decide which intersections to study without reducing individuals to an endless identity checklist? Hancock (2007) calls this the “categorical proliferation” problem.

Proposed solutions: (1) McCall’s typology directing theory-driven category selection; (2) focusing on intersections that produce measurable social harm or legal exclusion; (3) using grounded theory to let participants’ own accounts determine relevant categories.

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Depoliticisation and Co-optation

“Intersectionality is being used to make diversity more comfortable rather than to challenge the structures that produce inequality.”— Jennifer Nash, Black Feminism Reimagined (2019), paraphrased
The Co-optation Risk

As intersectionality has been adopted by mainstream institutions — corporations, universities, government agencies — it has been stripped of its radical Black feminist origins. When a corporation uses “intersectionality” to improve diversity metrics without changing its pay structures, the framework has been politically neutered. Crenshaw herself has noted that intersectionality has become “a word without a commitment.”

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Intersectionality in European Contexts

European AdaptationsWhat’s Different
  • European racial formations involve colonial histories and postwar migration differently
  • Class remains more theoretically central in European sociology (Bourdieu’s legacy)
  • Religion (especially Islam) operates as a racialising category in European contexts
  • EU “gender mainstreaming” adopted intersectionality as policy tool — with mixed results
Key European Scholars
  • Nira Yuval-Davis — gender, ethnicity, and nationalism in European contexts
  • Floya Anthias — translocational positionality
  • Sirma Bilge — critiques “ornamental intersectionality”
  • Kathy Davis — why intersectionality became a feminist buzzword
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10 — Contemporary Movements IASNOVA.COM

Intersectionality in Social Movements

Intersectionality has moved from academic theory to activist practice, shaping how the most significant social movements of the 21st century understand and organise.

Black Lives Matter
Race, Gender & Queer Identity
BLM was co-founded in 2013 by three Black women — Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi — two of whom identify as queer. The movement explicitly centres an intersectional analysis of police violence, challenging how Black trans women’s deaths and cases like Sandra Bland’s (race × gender × mental health) are ignored in single-axis analyses.
Key text: Garza, A. (2014). “A Herstory of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement”
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#MeToo
Gender, Race & Class in Sexual Violence
#MeToo was originally founded by Tarana Burke, a Black woman, in 2006 for survivors of sexual violence in marginalised communities — a decade before its viral moment. Its 2017 resurgence centred white celebrity women. Intersectional critics showed domestic workers, undocumented women, and women of colour faced structural barriers to speaking out that the mainstream framing did not address.
Key analysis: Phipps (2020) — Me, Not You: The Trouble with Mainstream Feminism
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Disability Justice
Disability, Race, Class & Queerness
The disability justice movement (Sins Invalid, 2006) explicitly critiques mainstream disability rights for centring white, middle-class physically disabled people. It centres those facing multiple oppressions — disabled people of colour, queer and trans disabled people, disabled people in poverty — whose needs cannot be addressed by single-axis disability advocacy.
Key principle: “Nothing About Us Without Us” — expanded to “Nothing About Any of Us Without All of Us”
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Climate Justice
Race, Class & Environmental Harm
Climate justice movements apply intersectionality to show that environmental degradation does not affect all equally. Indigenous communities, communities of colour, and low-income communities face disproportionate exposure to pollution and displacement — an intersection of race, class, and nationality. The mainstream climate movement’s whiteness has been critiqued intersectionally.
Key concept: “sacrifice zones” — communities of colour bearing disproportionate environmental risk
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11 — Student FAQs IASNOVA.COM

Frequently Asked Questions

Common exam and essay questions answered for students in the US, UK, and across Europe.

What is intersectionality and who coined the term?+
Intersectionality is a theoretical framework asserting that social identity categories — race, gender, class, sexuality, disability — do not operate independently but interact simultaneously to produce distinct experiences of privilege and oppression. The term was coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw in her 1989 paper “Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex.” She developed it to explain why Black women fell through the gaps of anti-discrimination law, which was designed for single-axis claims — race (for Black men) or sex (for white women) — and could not address the intersection of both.
What is the difference between additive and intersectional analysis?+
An additive model treats identity categories as separate and stackable: being a woman adds disadvantage; being Black adds more. The problem: this assumes each category is experienced uniformly regardless of other identities.

An intersectional analysis argues categories are mutually constitutive — they transform each other. A Black woman does not experience racism then sexism in sequence; she experiences a qualitatively distinct form of oppression shaped by their simultaneous interaction. This cannot be understood by studying Black men and white women separately and combining findings.
What is Patricia Hill Collins’ Matrix of Domination?+
The Matrix of Domination (Collins, 1990) models how interlocking oppressions are organised across four domains:

Structural — laws, policies, institutions (housing, education, criminal justice)
Disciplinary — bureaucracies, surveillance, management, standardised testing
Hegemonic — culture, ideology, media, religion
Interpersonal — everyday interactions, microaggressions, personal relationships

Key insights: no domain is more fundamental than others; every domain also contains sites of resistance; everyone simultaneously occupies positions of both privilege and oppression.
What are Leslie McCall’s three approaches to intersectional research?+
McCall (2005) identified three methodological approaches:

Anticategorical — deconstructs social categories entirely, treating them as unstable constructs to be dismantled. Associated with poststructuralism and queer theory.

Intracategorical — focuses on a specific, overlooked intersection as a critical lens. Typically qualitative. Example: Crenshaw’s analysis of Black women’s legal invisibility.

Intercategorical — provisionally uses categories to track how inequality is distributed across multiple axes. Typically quantitative. Example: pay gap analysis by race × gender × education.
What are the main critiques of intersectionality?+
The key critiques include:

Category problem — using identity categories risks reifying the constructs intersectionality seeks to critique (Butler; Alcoff).
Methodological challenge — how to operationalise multiple simultaneous identities without infinite regress (Hancock, 2007).
Scope creep — the concept has expanded so broadly it risks losing analytical precision.
Depoliticisation — co-opted by institutions that use the language without structural change (Nash, 2008, 2019).
Context-specificity — developed in a US context that may not translate directly to European or Global South settings.
How does intersectionality apply to healthcare inequalities?+
Intersectional analysis reveals healthcare inequalities invisible to single-axis analyses. Black women in the USA have maternal mortality rates 2–3× higher than white women regardless of education or income — this only emerges when race and gender are analysed together. Pain management studies show racial bias; intersectional analysis shows Black women’s pain is doubly dismissed (race + gender). Similarly, disabled women of colour face distinct barriers to healthcare access that neither disability studies nor race/gender analyses alone capture.
How does intersectionality differ from standpoint theory?+
Standpoint theory (Harding, Hartsock) argues that social location shapes what people can know — that marginalised people have epistemic advantages because they must understand both their own perspective and the dominant perspective.

Intersectionality builds on standpoint theory but specifies that social location is determined by the intersection of multiple, simultaneous identity categories. Collins’ “outsider-within” concept combines both: the distinctive standpoint of Black domestic workers is shaped by the specific intersection of race, class, and gender simultaneously, not any of these alone.
Is intersectionality relevant in European sociology?+
Yes, with important adaptations. European scholars address colonial histories differently configured than US slavery; postwar migration producing distinct racial formations; religion (especially Islam) as a racialising category; and a stronger theoretical tradition of class analysis (Bourdieu).

Key European contributors: Nira Yuval-Davis (UK) — politics of belonging; Floya Anthias — translocational positionality; Sirma Bilge (Canada/France) — critique of ornamental intersectionality; Kathy Davis — why intersectionality became a buzzword. The EU officially adopted intersectionality in gender mainstreaming, though institutional adoption often strips the radical content.
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12 — References IASNOVA.COM

Key References

  1. Crenshaw, K. W. (1989). Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex. University of Chicago Legal Forum, 1989(1), 139–167.
  2. Crenshaw, K. W. (1991). Mapping the margins: Intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color. Stanford Law Review, 43(6), 1241–1299.
  3. Collins, P. H. (1990). Black Feminist Thought. Routledge.
  4. Collins, P. H., & Bilge, S. (2020). Intersectionality (2nd ed.). Polity Press.
  5. hooks, b. (1981). Ain’t I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism. South End Press.
  6. hooks, b. (1984). Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center. South End Press.
  7. Lorde, A. (1984). Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches. The Crossing Press.
  8. Davis, A. Y. (1981). Women, Race & Class. Random House.
  9. Anzaldúa, G. (1987). Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza. Aunt Lute Books.
  10. Combahee River Collective. (1977). A Black feminist statement.
  11. McCall, L. (2005). The complexity of intersectionality. Signs, 30(3), 1771–1800.
  12. Hancock, A. M. (2007). When multiplication doesn’t equal quick addition. Perspectives on Politics, 5(1), 63–79.
  13. Nash, J. C. (2008). Re-thinking intersectionality. Feminist Review, 89(1), 1–15.
  14. Nash, J. C. (2019). Black Feminism Reimagined: After Intersectionality. Duke University Press.
  15. Hancock, A. M. (2016). Intersectionality: An Intellectual History. Oxford University Press.
  16. Yuval-Davis, N. (2006). Intersectionality and feminist politics. European Journal of Women’s Studies, 13(3), 193–209.
  17. Richie, B. E. (1996). Compelled to Crime. Routledge.
  18. Morris, M. W. (2016). Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools. The New Press.
  19. Bilge, S. (2013). Intersectionality undone. Du Bois Review, 10(2), 405–424.
  20. Phipps, A. (2020). Me, Not You: The Trouble with Mainstream Feminism. Manchester University Press.
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