Available Formats
Economic Development and Women in the World Community
By (Author) Hans C. Blomqvist
By (author) Kartik Roy
By (author) Clement A. Tisdell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
16th February 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Gender studies, gender groups
Cultural studies
338.90082
Hardback
256
After reviewing theories about how women are likely to fare as a result of economic development, the editors and their contributors focus on the socioeconomic status of women and changes in it as a result of processes of economic development in individual countries in five continents. Economic development is supposed to remove impediments to the improvement in women's status. In some developing countries researchers have found that instead of lessening the forces of restrictions, economic development may, in fact, have strengthened them. The editors call for a greater involvement of women as active participants in the process of dismantling social, legal, and institutional barriers to women's development.
This book provides a great deal of food for thought and demonstrates how much work on the subject is still necessary. The literature list, which contains more than 360 titles, offers the interested reader an opportunity to go into more detail.-Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture
"This book provides a great deal of food for thought and demonstrates how much work on the subject is still necessary. The literature list, which contains more than 360 titles, offers the interested reader an opportunity to go into more detail."-Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture
KARTIK C. ROY is Associate Professor, Department of Economics at the University of Queensland. He is also Adjunct Professor at the Swedish School of Economics and Business in Helsinki, Finland, and has authored of 19 previous books and 40 articles in international journals. CLEMENT A. TISDELL is Professor of Economics at the University of Queensland. HANS C. BLOMQVIST is Associate Professor of Economics at the Swedish School of Economics and Business Administration in Helsinki, Finland.