scholarly journals Evaluation of the proteomic profile in saliva of brazilian home-based and informal workers

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alda Neis Miranda Araujo ◽  
Danielle Zildeana Sousa Furtado ◽  
Heron Dominguez Torres Silva ◽  
Kelly Polido Kaneshiro Olympio ◽  
Nilson Antônio Assunção
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eduardo Marinho Barbosa ◽  
Vilma Sousa Santana ◽  
Sílvia Ferrite ◽  
Felipe Campos ◽  
Gisella Cristina de Oliveira Silva ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natascia Boeri

The World Bank’s premise that “gender equality is good business” characterizes the current gender and economic development model. Policymakers and development practitioners promote and encourage women’s entrepreneurialism from the conviction that increasing women’s market-based opportunities is key to lifting women, their families, and communities out of poverty, resulting in the construction of a gendered entrepreneurial subject. Based on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews with home-based garment workers in Ahmedabad, India, this article questions the portrayal of women informal workers as entrepreneurs. Employing a social reproduction framework, I argue that the exploitative characteristics of informal work (i.e., paying for the costs of production and its temporal/spatial characteristic) are falsely interpreted as features of entrepreneurialism (i.e., investment and autonomy). Because work is completed in the worker’s own home, work and care become a mutual burden in which woman’s sense of providing for her family is impeded by both these roles. A feminist social reproduction framework of embodied labor links women’s responsibility for and contribution to family well-being with women’s marginalized economic position. Examining home-based work through this lens reveals the contradiction of the entrepreneurialism discourse.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernanda Junqueira Salles ◽  
Maciel Santos Luz ◽  
Kelly Polido Kaneshiro Olympio

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Asha Kuzhiparambil

<p>The paper contributes to the literature that examines the connections between local and global by extending the focus of cross-border production circuits to the hinterlands within the nation. A secondary informal circuit is conceptualised in order to argue how the informal sector is coexisting with the formal sector and contributing to the global market. For this purpose, the case of the cashew nut processing industry in Kerala, India, has been examined. The network of clandestine home-based cashew processors identified during the field study in Kerala illustrates the less visible local nodes of the global cashew circuit. The study also explores the informal workers’ restricted options and choices due to their gender, health issues, age and financial liabilities.</p>


2020 ◽  
pp. 169-204
Author(s):  
Rina Agarwala ◽  
Ronald Herring

Agarwala and Herring make the important observation that our view of class politics is often skewed by a misleading preoccupation with the patterns of class politics that arose in nineteenth and twentieth century Europe. They develop this point by analysing the rise of India’s informal workers and its agrarian producers. After decades of being excluded from the formal labour movement, self-employed workers, domestic workers, recycling and sanitation workers, and home-based garment workers have organized to gain legal recognition as workers and secure new forms of labour protection. In agriculture, despite the political decline of ‘bullock capitalists’ in recent years, Agarwala and Herring analyse a new basis for agrarian mobilization—the right to grow genetically engineered Bt cotton. Their analysis of these cases shows that the mutual constitution of class, caste, and local culture affects the success and direction of political mobilization.


2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith Jerald ◽  
Willa C. Siegel ◽  
Sarah Semlak
Keyword(s):  

1990 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Eliason Kisker ◽  
◽  
Valarie Piper
Keyword(s):  

2000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edna R. Fiedler ◽  
Pam Della Rocco ◽  
David J. Schroeder ◽  
Kiet T. Nguyen

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