The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Assembling Flowers and Cultivating Homes: Labor and Gender in Colombia
Assembling Flowers and Cultivating Homes: Labor and Gender in Colombia

Assembling Flowers and Cultivating Homes: Labor and Gender in Colombia

Current price: $53.99
Loading Inventory...
Get it at Barnes and Noble

Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
Colombia is a major exporter of fresh-cut flowers. As in other global assembly line industries, women constitute a majority of Colombia's floriculture workforce. This ethnographic study explores the links between agro-industrial employment in the context of economic adjustment programs and the individual experience of employment and economic change at the household level. Author Greta Friedemann-Sánchez's challenges the current academic consensus that transnational assembly line industries reinforce patriarchal ideologies of reproduction and the exploitation of women. What from a global perspective may be perceived as exploitation can be seen from the local perspective as an opportunity within the community. Specifically, the study focuses on how the interrelated factors of formal employment, wage income, property ownership, social capital, and self-esteem articulate with women's resistance to male dominated households and domestic violence. Expertly combining qualitative and quantitative methodologies, Assembling Flowers and Cultivating Homes contributes greatly to the study of gender and power, household economics and structure, and Latin American society.
Powered by Adeptmind