Full Description
This book explores Indian women's economic contribution through paid and unpaid work in different sectors of the economy and society in extremely diverse life situations and geographical locations. It highlights gender implications of interlinkages between local, national, regional and global dimensions of women's paid and unpaid work in India. It encompasses a vast canvas of life worlds of working women in the metropolitan, urban, peri-urban, rural, tribal areas in manufacturing, agricultural, fisheries, sericulture, plantation and service sectors of the Indian economy. It provides nuanced insights into intersectional marginalities of caste, class, ethnicity, religion and gender. The chapters are based on primary data collection and triangulation of qualitative and quantitative research methodologies. It presents the multiple marginalities of Indian women in the globalized political economy of the 21st century. It not only focuses on emerging issues but also suggests evidence-based policy imperatives. This book is an essential read for researchers, scholars, policymakers, practitioners and students of women/gender studies.
Contents
Introduction.- Macroeconomic Policies, Globalisation and Women in the Work Force.- Women's Work: Worker's Agency and Dignity of Labour Under Lens.- Where do Migrant Women Work? Glimpses of Paid and Unpaid Work among Women Migrant Workers in Informal Sector in India.- Women's Paid Work as a Bubble of Empowerment: A Case Study of a Social Enterprise Working with Women Artisans.- Decoding Professional Women: An Analysis of Social Structure and Organizational Role Stress.- Gender, Labour, and the Social Reproduction of Motherhood: A Study of Commercial Surrogacy in Mumbai.- The Travails of Women Street Entrepreneurs in Aizawl, Mizoram.- Negotiating Rights for Street Vendors: The Importance of Incorporating a Gender Perspective.- Begging or Caste-based Urban occupations?.- Making Visible the Invisible: Women Artists and Herstory.- Breaking Boundaries- Women in the Non-Traditional Livelihoods as ProfessionalDrivers.