Textile Production and Gender in the Sokoto Caliphate

1993 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 361-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colleen Kriger

Men and women, trained in the occupations of spinner, weaver, dyer, tailor and embroiderer, manufactured the renowned textile products of the Sokoto Caliphate, a nineteenth-century state in the central Sudan region of West Africa. The numerical distributions of men and women within these occupations were uneven, but not in accordance with the pattern described most frequently in the literature. Offered here is another, more detailed view of textile production. Women were not simply spinners but were also weavers and dyers. Uneven, too, were the geographical distributions of men and women workers. Men skilled in textile manufacturing were widely disseminated throughout the caliphate, as were women spinners; women skilled at weaving and dyeing, however, were concentrated mainly in the southern emirates of Nupe and Ilorin. Similarly, male entrepreneurs organized large-scale textile manufacturing enterprises in the north-central portion of the caliphate while enterprises created by women were located to the south.New sources, the textile products of the caliphate, along with other contemporary evidence, reveal that women's work was more varied, more prominent, more highly skilled and more organized than previously thought. Comparative analyses along gender lines show that men's work and women's work were similar in the degree of training required and the levels of skill achieved. Labor, especially skilled labor, was critical to textile production if the caliphate was to maintain its external markets. But there were substantial differences in the degree to which men and women could mobilize and organize labor. A variety of social and political factors in caliphate society combined to assist men and hinder women in the organization and management of textile manufacturing.

2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Cohn

This essay attempts to contribute to the study of gender and development by developing a systematic theory of the division of work between men and women in the global North and the global South. There is an extensive literature on women's work and development; this literature consists of rich case studies that do not attempt to identify general principles that apply to women's work as a whole. In formal employment settings, women are most likely to be excluded from settings where employers are buffered from labor costs and do not have to utilize cheap labor. In the global North, this means settings that are capital-intensive, where raw material and machinery costs reduce the importance of wage costs in total budgets. In the global South, petroleum lowers the importance of wage costs, promoting male employment, while export orientation increases the importance of cheap labor, promoting female employment. Family firms and female self-employment have their own dynamics, which are discussed.


1998 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 968-970
Author(s):  
Ronald J. Burke ◽  
Louis A. Divinagracia ◽  
Ermias Mamo

This study compared the work and career experiences of Filipino professional and managerial women with men and women supervisors. Data were collected from 200 women working in banking and financial services and the fashion and cosmetics sectors. Sex of supervisor was not associated with Filipino women's work and career experiences.


2009 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
NICOLA VERDON

ABSTRACTThis article uses a case-study of agriculture to explore the range of anxieties and contradictions surrounding women's work in the interwar period. National statistics are shown to be inconsistent and questionable, raising questions for historians reliant on official data, but they point to regional variation as the continuous defining feature of female labour force participation. Looking beyond the quantitative data a distinction emerges between traditional work on the land and processes. The article shows that women workers in agriculture provoked vigorous debate among a range of interest groups about the scale, nature, and suitability of this work. These groups, such as the National Federation of Women's Institutes, the Women's Farm and Garden Association, and the National Union of Agricultural Workers represented a range of social classes and outlooks, and had diverse agendas underpinning their interest. Consequently women's agricultural labour is exposed as a site of class and gender conflict, connecting to wider economic and cultural tensions surrounding the place of women in interwar society.


2021 ◽  
Vol 18 (18) ◽  
pp. 502
Author(s):  
Jayati Ghosh

Jayati Ghosh enseñó economía en la Universidad Jawaharlal Nehru de Nueva Delhi durante casi 35 años. En enero de 2021 se incorporó a la Universidad de Massachusetts Amherst. Es autora y/o editora de 19 libros, entre ellos Never Done and Poorly Paid: Women's Work in Globalising India (2009); el coeditado Elgar Handbook of Alternative Theories of Economic Development (2014); Demonetisation Decoded (2017), y Women Workers in the Informal Economy (de próxima publicación) y casi 200 artículos académicos. Ha recibido varios premios, entre ellos por sus distinguidas contribuciones a las ciencias sociales en la India en 2015; el Premio de Investigación sobre Trabajo Decente de la Organización Internacional del Trabajo en 2010; el Premio NordSud de Ciencias Sociales 2010, Italia. Ha asesorado a gobiernos de la India y de otros países, por ejemplo, como Presidenta de la Comisión de Andhra Pradesh sobre el Bienestar de los Agricultores en 2004, y miembro de la Comisión Nacional del Conocimiento de la India (2005-09). Es la Secretaria Ejecutiva de International Development Economics Associates (IDEAS), una red internacional de economistas del desarrollo heterodoxos. Ha sido consultora de organizaciones internacionales como la OIT, el PNUD, la UNCTAD, UN-DESA, UNRISD y ONU Mujeres, y es miembro de varias comisiones internacionales, como la Comisión Internacional para la Reforma de la Fiscalidad Corporativa Internacional (ICRICT) y la Comisión para la Transformación Económica Global de INET.


2021 ◽  
pp. 001946622110132
Author(s):  
N. Neetha

The pandemic has resulted in severe dislocations in the lives of many women workers especially the poor and the neglected, exacerbating the ‘chronic crisis’ in the everyday existence of the workers to unprecedented proportions. Evidences from the ground signal desperate times with women workers facing severe unemployment, reduced incomes and adverse conditions of work. The article argues that the crisis of women’s work caused by COVID-19 is not a sudden tragic consequence of the pandemic, but an outcome of pre-existing structural and systemic ruptures. For long, women have confronted, exclusion and precarious employment opportunities resulting from anti-women attitude at workplaces with lack of acknowledgement and attempts to address the deep-rooted structural fault lines leading to systemic failures. After giving the larger background that are important in the understanding of women’s employment in the context of the pandemic, the article gives an overview of women’s employment during the pandemic taking up two specific sectors that are particularly marked—paid domestic work and frontline community workers (ASHA and Anganwadi workers) are examined in detail. The article suggests that the COVID-19 pandemic has further exacerbated and personalised the endemic context of crisis for women calling for state intervention at the time to correct systemic issues that have positioned women unequally in employment. JEL Codes: A14, B54, F66, J01, J21


Author(s):  
Laurel Bossen ◽  
Hill Gates

This chapter challenges assumptions that footbinding was confined to the urban elite and that women with bound feet were unproductive. On the contrary, footbinding was very common among poor villagers who could not afford to support unproductive members. Examining the enormous historical importance of women’s work in China’s handcraft textile production, this chapter argues for the importance of handwork performed by footbound daughters. Emphasizing the work girls performed before marriage, this chapter also considers the misdirections and omissions that have sidetracked queries about a practice that debilitated hundreds of millions of Chinese girls and women. Feminist historians and economic historians alike have underestimated the significance of hand labor by young girls and failed to examine its links to footbinding.


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