Filipovic was a columnist for The Guardian.[8] Since 2005, she has been a blogger at Feministe, one of the largest feminist blogs.[9][10][11] In April 2014, Cosmopolitan hired her to write for its blog.[12]
Filipovic has been an outspoken critic of the website A Voice for Men.[18]Michelle Goldberg wrote in The Washington Post, said she had been "singled out by" men's rights groups for her criticism.[19] She was featured in the 2014 book Hate Crimes in Cyberspace due to the harassment she faced for her feminist blog.[20] According to Kerryn Goldsworthy, she has been googlebombed by her detractors.[21]
TSA and civil liberties
A Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screener was fired after Filipovic blogged about an incident in which a handwritten comment was left in her luggage.[22] She later wrote, "I would much prefer a look at why 'security' has been used to justify so many intrusions into our civil liberties."[23]
Beauty pageants
Filipovic has written of beauty pageants that "the norms that these contests promote are unfortunately not...obsolete...We pay lip service to women's rights, but focus more on how good women look in a bathing suit."[24]
Name changes
Filipovic has argued that women should not change their names when they marry. A 2013 column for The Guardian, "Why should married women change their names? Let men change theirs", was cited as recommended reading on the social construction of gender in Critical Encounters in Secondary English: Teaching Literacy Theory to Adolescents by Deborah Appleman (2014).[25][26] Filipovic married Ty Lohrer McCormick in 2018, and kept her surname.[27][28]
Domestic violence and asylum
Filipovic has criticized Jeff Sessions' directive to refuse grants of asylum to women fleeing domestic violence. She emphasized that women who suffer domestic violence in places where the government refuses to protect them are being persecuted. She stated: "Sessions, because of his deep antipathy toward immigrants and his misogynistic worldview that domestic violence is a private family matter, has undercut this promise of safe harbor – and taken a law meant for protection and turned it into a cudgel of sexist cruelty."[29]
She has also written about how the prohibition of abortion in Honduras drives women who are victims of sexual violence to migrate from the country.[30]
Filipovic, Jill (2008), "Offensive feminism: the conservative gender norms that perpetuate rape culture, and how feminists can fight back", in Jaclyn Friedman; Jessica Valenti (eds.), Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and A World Without Rape, Seal Press, ISBN9780786727056
Filipovic, Jill (2017), The H-Spot: The Feminist Pursuit of Happiness, Nation Books, ISBN978-1568585475
Filipovic, Jill (2020), OK Boomer, Let's Talk: How My Generation Got Left Behind, Simon and Schuster, ISBN978-1982153762
^By Jill FilipovicUpdated 9:21 AM ET, Sat May 6, 2017 (May 6, 2017). "The white guys are back in charge (opinion)". CNN. Archived from the original on May 7, 2017. Retrieved September 10, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
Chittal, Nisha, "American women", in Nick Barham; Jake Dockter; Mark Search; Matt Brown; Tiffani Bryant; Chelsea Bauch (eds.), American Dreamers, Sharp Stuff, pp. 352–359, ISBN9780988603912
Filipovic, Jill (2013), "The Grandchildren Speak: Every Life a Lesson", in Jerry Witkovsky (ed.), The Grandest Love, Xlibris Corporation, pp. 88–89, ISBN9781483680903