The Women of Azua: Work and Family in the Rural Dominican Republic
By (Author) Barbara Finlay
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
20th November 1989
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology: work and labour
305.42097293
Hardback
204
"The Women of Azua" studies the effects of male-oriented economic development projects and export processing industries on the traditional family structure in Third World countries. Emphasizing the sexual division of labour, this study is based on field observations and a survey of women in rural communities in the Dominican Republic. The communities studied are all located near large agribusiness food-production facilities. The author studies the impact of these companies - through their employment of women - on families, attitudes, level of living and the aspirations of the women themselves. While measuring the impact of industrial employment on women and their families, this volume also presents a culture and its women. This study covers a wide range of characteristics including levels of living, employment, marital status and attitudes, household division of labour, nutrition and health, childbearing and aspirations for children. For each topic the author compares two representative samples of women: a "community sample" and a "worker sample". The typical woman in the rural Dominican Republic is seen through the "community sample". The "worker sample" displays the differences in women's lives due to their work for an export food-processing company.
BARBARA FINLAY is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Texas A&M University. She has published two books and a number of articles, mostly in the fields of research methods, the sociology of the family, and gender issues.