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                             Volume : V, Issue : III, April - 2015 A STUDY OF GLOBALIZATION AND THIRD WORLD WOMEN Dolly Limbu, None By : Laxmi Book Publication Abstract : Globalization has become one of the most extensively used terms of the decade. With the advancement of science, technology and communi- cation system, the world has become as a global village. Guy Brainbant  says, “The process of globalization not only includes opening up of world trade, development of advanced means of communication, internationali- sation of financial markets, growing importance of MNC's, population migrations and more generally increased mobility of persons, goods, capital, data and ideas but also infections, diseases and pollution".  Keywords :  Article : Cite This Article : Dolly Limbu, None(2015). A STUDY OF GLOBALIZATION AND THIRD WORLD WOMEN. Indian Streams Research Journal, Vol. V, Issue. III, http://isrj.org/UploadedData/6538.pdf References : - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Hensman .2004,1034.
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
 - Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
 - Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
 - Feminisation of poverty is approached in terms of three contributing factors that have been underscored in the women-development and gender-and-development (WID/GAD) literature. 1. The growth of female-headed households. 2. Intra-household inequalities and bias against women and girls and 3. Neoliberal economic policies, including structural adjustments and post-socialist market transitions. ( from, Valentine M. Moghadam. “The Feminisation of Poverty?”).
 - From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
 - Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
 - Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  
                            
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