The Other Side of Formal Employment: Working Women How have Returned to their Communities and Villages in Sri-Lanka is an Australian Development Research Awards Scheme (ADRAS) research project which was awarded in the last ADRAS round in 2012. The research was carried out by Edith Cowan University from April 2013 – November 2016. The objective of the project was to explore to what extent women have been able to sustain their economic and social empowerment after leaving their formal employment in Sri Lanka’s manufacturing industry and returning to their communities..
The rise of economic liberalism in Sri Lanka after 1992 has generated a continuous and powerful deba...
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social, religious, political and e...
This research examines the role and strategies of a women-supportive organisation for wom...
This paper compares the post-employment social, political and economic profiles of women previously ...
The impact of globalization processes on women, such as the new economic division of labour and relo...
Sri Lanka as a developing economy that achieved gender equity in education and a higher literacy rat...
This research is conducted with the purpose of exploring the reasons which havecaused the Sri Lankan...
This paper is based on AusAID-funded research that focused on Sri Lanka’s Export Processing Zones (E...
The introduction of free education system [1943] and the open economy [1977]in Sri Lanka have establ...
Even though Sri Lanka is a fore-runner in many human development dimensions and aspects of gender eq...
The vast majority of research on women who work in Export Processing Zones (EPZs) and in Sri Lanka f...
Since the economic liberalization in 1977, a large number of Sri Lankan women have entered the labou...
This study is an analysis of the economic activity of women focussing on secondary and university e...
The rise of economic liberalism in Sri Lanka in the latter half of the twentieth century has generat...
This report outlines the key findings of the study looking at the socioeconomic impact of employing ...
The rise of economic liberalism in Sri Lanka after 1992 has generated a continuous and powerful deba...
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social, religious, political and e...
This research examines the role and strategies of a women-supportive organisation for wom...
This paper compares the post-employment social, political and economic profiles of women previously ...
The impact of globalization processes on women, such as the new economic division of labour and relo...
Sri Lanka as a developing economy that achieved gender equity in education and a higher literacy rat...
This research is conducted with the purpose of exploring the reasons which havecaused the Sri Lankan...
This paper is based on AusAID-funded research that focused on Sri Lanka’s Export Processing Zones (E...
The introduction of free education system [1943] and the open economy [1977]in Sri Lanka have establ...
Even though Sri Lanka is a fore-runner in many human development dimensions and aspects of gender eq...
The vast majority of research on women who work in Export Processing Zones (EPZs) and in Sri Lanka f...
Since the economic liberalization in 1977, a large number of Sri Lankan women have entered the labou...
This study is an analysis of the economic activity of women focussing on secondary and university e...
The rise of economic liberalism in Sri Lanka in the latter half of the twentieth century has generat...
This report outlines the key findings of the study looking at the socioeconomic impact of employing ...
The rise of economic liberalism in Sri Lanka after 1992 has generated a continuous and powerful deba...
Over the last three decades, the impact of dramatic change in the social, religious, political and e...
This research examines the role and strategies of a women-supportive organisation for wom...