Through the lens of female formal employment, this paper aims to highlight the complex lives of female garment factory workers in urban Bangladesh and subsequently challenge the theoretical foundations of current policies that seek to empower them. Based on the assumption that employment guarantees empowerment, we identify the significant power imbalance that exists between men and women at all levels of Bangladeshi society. In doing so, this paper provides a more complex understanding of how socio-cultural struc- tures significantly impact women’s experience of space, and ultimately provides practical and theoretical recommendations to help inform effective policy development
The chapter analyses women's progress referring to the latest available statistical and comparative ...
Labour markets are still heavily gendered everywhere, even when women's participation in the labour ...
Feminist literature on globalization has examined the forces that motivate women to stay in factory ...
Through the lens of female formal employment, this paper aims to highlight the complex lives of fema...
Women's participation in export-oriented industries has been one of the most dominant features in ma...
Master of Arts in Development Studies. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2015.The impact of female...
The role of the Ready-made Garment (RMG) sector in transforming the lives of working women in Bangla...
The study measured empowerment and revealed effect of women employment on their empowerment in the K...
Drawing on survey and ethnographic data, this article presents empirical evidence regarding the impa...
Empirical studies on the impact of women’s paid jobs on their empowerment and welfare in the Banglad...
There are more than ninety percent female factory employees at RMG plants. That more women than male...
Empirical studies on the impact of women’s paid jobs on their empowerment and welfare in Bangladesh ...
The contemporary Bangladesh economy is marked by sustained increases in women’s paid employment, a r...
This thesis explores how low-income women in Bangladesh experience empowerment on a day to day basis...
This dissertation examines the process of proletarianization and cultural transformation among women...
The chapter analyses women's progress referring to the latest available statistical and comparative ...
Labour markets are still heavily gendered everywhere, even when women's participation in the labour ...
Feminist literature on globalization has examined the forces that motivate women to stay in factory ...
Through the lens of female formal employment, this paper aims to highlight the complex lives of fema...
Women's participation in export-oriented industries has been one of the most dominant features in ma...
Master of Arts in Development Studies. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2015.The impact of female...
The role of the Ready-made Garment (RMG) sector in transforming the lives of working women in Bangla...
The study measured empowerment and revealed effect of women employment on their empowerment in the K...
Drawing on survey and ethnographic data, this article presents empirical evidence regarding the impa...
Empirical studies on the impact of women’s paid jobs on their empowerment and welfare in the Banglad...
There are more than ninety percent female factory employees at RMG plants. That more women than male...
Empirical studies on the impact of women’s paid jobs on their empowerment and welfare in Bangladesh ...
The contemporary Bangladesh economy is marked by sustained increases in women’s paid employment, a r...
This thesis explores how low-income women in Bangladesh experience empowerment on a day to day basis...
This dissertation examines the process of proletarianization and cultural transformation among women...
The chapter analyses women's progress referring to the latest available statistical and comparative ...
Labour markets are still heavily gendered everywhere, even when women's participation in the labour ...
Feminist literature on globalization has examined the forces that motivate women to stay in factory ...