Gender and Work: A Comparative Analysis of Industrial Societies. Patricia A. RoosWomen in the World-System: Its Impact on Status and Fertility. Kathryn B. WardToward a Model of Women's Status. Frances E. Mascia-Lees

Signs ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 560-563
Author(s):  
Elizabeth M. Almquist
2011 ◽  
pp. 147-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard York ◽  
Christina Ergas

Our aim here is to strengthen the links between the world-systems perspective and research ongender inequality. Grounding our analysis in theories assessing the connections between genderrelationships and world-system processes, we empirically explore (]) the extent to whichwomen's status in nations overlaps with the world-system position of those nations and (2) theinfluence of women's status within nations on a variety of national characteristics. We find thatwomen's status has a moderately strong association with world-system position, which suggeststhat macro-comparative research may confound the respective effects on a variety of socialcharacteristics of women's status and world-system position if indicators of both factors are notincluded in analyses. We also find that, controlling for world-system position, GDP per capita,and urbanization, in nations where women have higher status (variously measured), total fertilityrates, infant mortality rates, military expenditures, and inflows of foreign direct investinent arelower, and public health care expenditures and per capita meat consumption are higher. Theseresults suggest that women's status likely has social effects that can be seen on the macro-level,and that world-systems analysts should pay more attention to theories of gender in their research.


Author(s):  
Jocelyn Olcott

This chapter considers the ways that the paltry funding available for IWY resulted in considerable influence by states and organizations that contributed to the UN voluntary fund for IWY activities. Due to time constraints, IWY planners established a consultative committee to plan the intergovernmental conference; Princess Ashraf Pahlavi, who had pledged $2 million to the voluntary fund, was named chair. While drafting the World Plan of Action, the consultative committee deliberated about how to prioritize issues related to women’s status, particularly between those who wanted to emphasize equality between men and women and those who sought economic development to improve standards of living across societies. Australian delegate Elizabeth Reid established a reputation for her facility in adjudicating these debates.


2014 ◽  
Vol 13 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 246-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rifat Akhter

Abstract Using World-System and Gender and Development theories to examine women’s status and fertility in the high fertility countries, I argue that fertility behavior is strongly related to an unequal power relationship between husbands and wives, which occurs because of a dependent economy. Dependent economy creates economic inequality and limits prospects for women’s upward mobility, which may be an important factor for maintaining high fertility. This research examines empirical data from 82 countries—where total fertility rate is higher than 2.1 per woman in a given nation. The study includes both semi-periphery and periphery regions with planned and market-oriented economies in order to investigate the influence of investment and dependent development on women’s status and fertility.


ILR Review ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 607
Author(s):  
Alice H. Cook ◽  
Patricia A. Ross

1999 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 481-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nitza Berkovitch ◽  
Karen Bradley

Author(s):  
Jocelyn Olcott

This chapter centers on US feminists’ objections to the fact that a man, Mexican Attorney General Pedro Ojeda Paullada, presided over the IWY intergovernmental conference. Those more familiar with UN protocols pointed to the common practice of having the head of the host country’s delegation preside over thematic conferences, and many participants from around the world applauded the idea that men also should be concerned about women’s status. Those objecting to Ojeda Paullada’s presidency coalesced into the self-styled Feminist Caucus. The episode raised issues about which strands of feminism enjoyed legitimacy in different contexts and whether women needed separate spaces to deliberate without involvement by men.


Author(s):  
Jocelyn Olcott

This chapter describes the ceremony and demonstrations that accompanied the inaugurations of the intergovernmental conference and the NGO tribune. It describes some of the protocols and procedures of a UN conference and the more informal atmosphere of the tribune. The conference would hold plenary sessions but also would convene two committees, the first charged with developing the World Plan of Action and the second charged with considering the integration of women into development and the impediments to women’s equality. The elaborate rituals and carefully crafted addresses fueled participants’ expectations that serious work might be accomplished at these gatherings that would effect a substantial improvement in women’s status around the world.


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