Becky Bowers discusses her research, which will seek to address the darker and often unheard counter narratives to ‘Bangalore rising’ by exploring the experiences of female construction workers in India’s tech capital
In the case of a relatively traditional society like India, on the one hand gender roles are strongl...
In March, Swetha Rao Dhananka visited LSE to discuss her doctoral research on social mobilisation in...
Rural-urban migration for construction work is widely characterised as forced migration, offering ...
While their labour shapes the growing cityscape, migrant construction workers often remain invisible...
Migration is a demographic process that has been chronicled across world history. Even though variou...
Bengaluru, the capital of Karnataka state in southern India, has undergone rapid transformation in r...
In Bangalore, women who work in information technology (IT) and other white-collar professions are p...
The migrant families who build India’s cities do so to meet practical and ritual aspirations rooted ...
This article examines the ways in which ideologies of aspiration, inclusion, and women’s empowerment...
This edition of SEEDS focuses on a project developed to integrate low-income women into Jamaica\u27s...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2000.Includes bibliogra...
The Indian construction industry has inherent gender biases owing to the perceived nature of work an...
This paper is discussed on the evidences and emerging issues of female migrants working in construct...
This dissertation examines the politics of labor and livelihood in India’s modernizing construction ...
Why do we need a gender perspective on infrastructure in Northeast India? Policy documents, vision s...
In the case of a relatively traditional society like India, on the one hand gender roles are strongl...
In March, Swetha Rao Dhananka visited LSE to discuss her doctoral research on social mobilisation in...
Rural-urban migration for construction work is widely characterised as forced migration, offering ...
While their labour shapes the growing cityscape, migrant construction workers often remain invisible...
Migration is a demographic process that has been chronicled across world history. Even though variou...
Bengaluru, the capital of Karnataka state in southern India, has undergone rapid transformation in r...
In Bangalore, women who work in information technology (IT) and other white-collar professions are p...
The migrant families who build India’s cities do so to meet practical and ritual aspirations rooted ...
This article examines the ways in which ideologies of aspiration, inclusion, and women’s empowerment...
This edition of SEEDS focuses on a project developed to integrate low-income women into Jamaica\u27s...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2000.Includes bibliogra...
The Indian construction industry has inherent gender biases owing to the perceived nature of work an...
This paper is discussed on the evidences and emerging issues of female migrants working in construct...
This dissertation examines the politics of labor and livelihood in India’s modernizing construction ...
Why do we need a gender perspective on infrastructure in Northeast India? Policy documents, vision s...
In the case of a relatively traditional society like India, on the one hand gender roles are strongl...
In March, Swetha Rao Dhananka visited LSE to discuss her doctoral research on social mobilisation in...
Rural-urban migration for construction work is widely characterised as forced migration, offering ...