Individualist feminism

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Individualist feminism is a blanket term for different forms of individualist feminist ideas, including predominantly existentialist, individualist anarchism and similar viewpoints. The proponents for this take on feminism can be found in both the left-wing and right-wing spectrum as well as among thinkers who are indifferent to such political spectrum classifications.

ifeminism

A mainly USA-based libertarian influenced individualism feminism is known as ifeminism.

This strain of individualist feminism advocates the equal treatment of men and women as individuals under just law. The core principle of individualist feminism is that all human beings have a moral and legal claim to their own persons and property, not to any sort of affirmative action policies or privileges.

The roots of individualist feminism date back to the nineteenth century when advocates of women's rights and abolitionism such as Angelina Emily Grimke and Sarah Grimke, William Lloyd Garrison, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony drew parallels between the disenfranchisement of blacks with that of women.

Ifeminist seek equal rights regardless of gender under just law — not equality of socioeconomic outcomes regardless of individuals' rights. For example, ifeminists do not ask government for special treatment in order to ensure equal representation by gender in all fields of work or to overcome wage inconsistencies that result from personal choices such as working fewer hours or engaging in less hazardous duties. They simply ask that government leave all people to peacefully negotiate business arrangements for themselves to the best of their abilities. As the cost of freedom, ifeminists accept personal responsibility for their own lives.