4 DOI: 10.3898/SOUN.71.EDITORIAL.2019 Neoliberalism, feminism and transnationalism Alison Winch, Kirsten Forkert and Sally Davison T he essays in this special issue attest to the multiplicities of neoliberal practice across the globe, and to the ways in which aggressive neoliberal marketisation impacts differently across different axes (of class, race, age and gender, amongst others). The focus of this issue is on feminism and gender inequality, but, as the contributors show in their many different ways, it is impossible ever to separate out a specifc form of inequality, and to see it as existing independently of other structures of privilege and disadvantage, or to see the experiences of any one group in isolation from the multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination and exclusion in which they are formed. Our contributors also offer a range of different ways of understanding this variety, and different takes on how to organise. What is not in dispute, however, is that women are organising in new and radical ways in many different contexts and in many different countries. Ruth Pearson, writing about women’s experience of neoliberalism in the UK, draws attention to women’s role in ‘daily and generational reproduction’, and argues that understanding the centrality of this work to the economy is key to any feminist political economy. She also argues that the rollback of social democracy has left most of those on whom this responsibility falls in a vulnerable position. Because it is primarily women who do this work, and because the cuts hit working-class Editorial