This research note considers how we measure women’s work in the sub-Saharan African (SSA) context. Drawing on qualitative work conducted in Burundi, the note examines how existing measures of women’s work do not accurately capture the intensity and type of work women in SSA undertake. Transcripts from qualitative interviews suggest that women think of work to meet their roles and responsibilities within the household. The women in the interviews do not frame work as a career or a primary activity in a time-use allocation. As a result, researchers need to nest questions regarding women’s work within surveys that ask about roles and responsibilities within the household, and about how women meet these responsibilities with a financial compone...
The debate about the empowerment potential of women’s access to labour market opportunities is a lon...
French version available in IDRC Digital LibraryGender labour market segregation is deeply entrenche...
This paper examines the female face of migration in sub-Saharan Africa.In the last two decades, ther...
In this working paper, the authors contrast two approaches to the measurement of women’s work applie...
Jacques Charmes — African women, economic activities and labour : From invisibility to recognition M...
Theoretical and empirical research provide conflicting views on whether women who do paid work are l...
The paper uses individual data for 9,957 female employees (drawn from a total sample of 29,332 indiv...
Since the 1970s and 1980s, women’s increased labour force participation has caught the attention of ...
Abstract This study addresses gender differentials in labour market outcomes in developing countries...
This chapter examines the difficulty of assessing the scale of informal employment from a gender per...
This article was published in Women's Studies International Forum [ © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. ] and the d...
Purpose: The existing gender gap in the workplace, that affects job satisfaction and career advancem...
This paper is an investigation of female entrepreneurship in Ghana. It seeks to answer the following...
This article places the research findings on women's work and gendered labor relations presented and...
One of the keys to understanding the low labor force participation rate among women and their weaker...
The debate about the empowerment potential of women’s access to labour market opportunities is a lon...
French version available in IDRC Digital LibraryGender labour market segregation is deeply entrenche...
This paper examines the female face of migration in sub-Saharan Africa.In the last two decades, ther...
In this working paper, the authors contrast two approaches to the measurement of women’s work applie...
Jacques Charmes — African women, economic activities and labour : From invisibility to recognition M...
Theoretical and empirical research provide conflicting views on whether women who do paid work are l...
The paper uses individual data for 9,957 female employees (drawn from a total sample of 29,332 indiv...
Since the 1970s and 1980s, women’s increased labour force participation has caught the attention of ...
Abstract This study addresses gender differentials in labour market outcomes in developing countries...
This chapter examines the difficulty of assessing the scale of informal employment from a gender per...
This article was published in Women's Studies International Forum [ © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. ] and the d...
Purpose: The existing gender gap in the workplace, that affects job satisfaction and career advancem...
This paper is an investigation of female entrepreneurship in Ghana. It seeks to answer the following...
This article places the research findings on women's work and gendered labor relations presented and...
One of the keys to understanding the low labor force participation rate among women and their weaker...
The debate about the empowerment potential of women’s access to labour market opportunities is a lon...
French version available in IDRC Digital LibraryGender labour market segregation is deeply entrenche...
This paper examines the female face of migration in sub-Saharan Africa.In the last two decades, ther...