While their labour shapes the growing cityscape, migrant construction workers often remain invisible – not only to property developers and consumers but also to the state. For female workers, this is compounded by gender-based discrimination within the industry. Utilising ethnographic data, this article explores how women working in construction in Bengaluru, India, both experience and strive for mobility. It provides a multi-sited analysis to establish the ways in which intersectionality between employment conditions, the urban environment and gender norms may inhibit or facilitate urban mobility for migrant female workers. Few ethnographic studies have attended to women’s experiences of intermingled work/accommodation sites within the ind...
This paper examines the intersections of caste and gender in the context of migration, industrial wo...
Although women’s experience of working in management has been the subject of extensive comment, the ...
The UK construction industry labour market is characterized by high levels of self-employment, subco...
Becky Bowers discusses her research, which will seek to address the darker and often unheard counter...
The migrant families who build India’s cities do so to meet practical and ritual aspirations rooted ...
Migration is a demographic process that has been chronicled across world history. Even though variou...
The Indian construction industry has inherent gender biases owing to the perceived nature of work an...
Bengaluru, the capital of Karnataka state in southern India, has undergone rapid transformation in r...
Drawing on feminist marxist and feminist geography scholarship the article develops the concept 'roo...
Using an original household survey conducted in Hyderabad and Mumbai that identifies intra-city spat...
Rural-urban migration for construction work is widely characterised as forced migration, offering ...
This article examines seasonal labour migrants' social and spatial engagement with contemporary tran...
This paper is discussed on the evidences and emerging issues of female migrants working in construct...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2000.Includes bibliogra...
This volume examines the role of women workers who are joining the workforce in urban India. Employm...
This paper examines the intersections of caste and gender in the context of migration, industrial wo...
Although women’s experience of working in management has been the subject of extensive comment, the ...
The UK construction industry labour market is characterized by high levels of self-employment, subco...
Becky Bowers discusses her research, which will seek to address the darker and often unheard counter...
The migrant families who build India’s cities do so to meet practical and ritual aspirations rooted ...
Migration is a demographic process that has been chronicled across world history. Even though variou...
The Indian construction industry has inherent gender biases owing to the perceived nature of work an...
Bengaluru, the capital of Karnataka state in southern India, has undergone rapid transformation in r...
Drawing on feminist marxist and feminist geography scholarship the article develops the concept 'roo...
Using an original household survey conducted in Hyderabad and Mumbai that identifies intra-city spat...
Rural-urban migration for construction work is widely characterised as forced migration, offering ...
This article examines seasonal labour migrants' social and spatial engagement with contemporary tran...
This paper is discussed on the evidences and emerging issues of female migrants working in construct...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2000.Includes bibliogra...
This volume examines the role of women workers who are joining the workforce in urban India. Employm...
This paper examines the intersections of caste and gender in the context of migration, industrial wo...
Although women’s experience of working in management has been the subject of extensive comment, the ...
The UK construction industry labour market is characterized by high levels of self-employment, subco...