In Search of the State? Neoliberalism and the labour question for pan-African feminism
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Date
2015
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Feminist Africa
Abstract
Since the 1970s, informal work has expanded and appeared in new guises
in the context of globalisation, neo-liberalism and migration, all of which
are highly gendered processes (Chen et al. 2004; ILO 2002b, 2007a). An as
yet unsettled question posed within feminist debates is whether women’s
increased participation in informal economic activity contributes to their
empowerment or their impoverishment (Meagher 2010). While economists
have tended to see the informal economy as a source of economic opportunity
for women in a sphere free of the gender-biased regulations of the formal
economy (USAID 2005), more critical feminist and political-economy analyses
have argued that the informal economy represents a poverty trap for women,
concentrating them in low-skill, low-income activities with little prospect
of advancement (Chant and Pedwell 2008; Chen et al 2006; Sassen 2002).
Recent ILO research on gender and informal economies, and gender studies
of global value chains offer gender analyses of wider global economic change
processes, paying attention to informal labour markets, global commodity
chains and transnational livelihood networks (Barrientos et al. 2003; Sassen
2002). These studies show that global and national economic changes have
not limited women’s entry into labour markets, but rather incorporate them
on unfavorable terms. Women are pushed into temporary and vulnerable
employment within the informal economy, and excluded from more lucrative
opportunities opened up by globalisation and liberalisation (Meagher 2010).
Description
Keywords
State, Neoliberalism, Labour question, Pan-African feminism
Citation
Ossome, L. (2015). In Search of the State? Neoliberalism and the labour question for pan-African feminism. Feminist Africa, 20(2015), 6-25.