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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

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  186. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
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  204. Hensman .2004,1034.
  205. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
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  213. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  214. Hensman .2004,1034.
  215. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  216. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
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  220. 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?”).
  221. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  222. 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?”).
  223. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  224. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  225. 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?”).
  226. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  227. 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?”).
  228. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  229. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  230. 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?”).
  231. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  232. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  233. Hensman .2004,1034.
  234. 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?”).
  235. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  236. Hensman .2004,1034.
  237. 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?”).
  238. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  239. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  240. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  241. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  242. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  243. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  244. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  245. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  246. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  247. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  248. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  249. 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?”).
  250. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  251. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  252. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  253. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  254. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  255. 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?”).
  256. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  257. Hensman .2004,1034.
  258. Hensman .2004,1034.
  259. 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?”).
  260. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  261. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  262. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  263. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  264. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  265. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  266. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  267. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  268. 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?”).
  269. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  270. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  271. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  272. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  273. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  274. Hensman .2004,1034.
  275. 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?”).
  276. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  277. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  278. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  279. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  280. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  281. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  282. 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?”).
  283. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  284. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  285. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  286. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  287. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  288. 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?”).
  289. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  290. 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?”).
  291. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  292. Hensman .2004,1034.
  293. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  294. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  295. 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?”).
  296. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  297. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  298. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  299. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  300. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  301. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  302. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  303. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  304. 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?”).
  305. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  306. 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?”).
  307. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  308. 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?”).
  309. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  310. 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?”).
  311. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  312. Hensman .2004,1034.
  313. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  314. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  315. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  316. 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?”).
  317. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  318. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  319. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  320. 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?”).
  321. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  322. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  323. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  324. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  325. Hensman .2004,1034.
  326. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  327. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  328. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  329. Mary E. John “Feminism, Poverty and Globalization”. Women’s Studies in India: A Reader.
  330. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  331. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  332. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  333. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  334. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  335. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  336. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  337. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  338. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  339. Hensman .2004,1034.
  340. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  341. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  342. 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?”).
  343. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  344. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  345. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.
  346. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  347. Hensman .2004,1034.
  348. Hensman .2004,1034.
  349. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  350. Globalization and Feminism: Opportunities and Obstacle for Activism in Global Arena by Myra Marx Ferree(2006).
  351. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  352. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  353. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  354. A shift of work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am.
  355. Haraway, Donna, “A manifesto for cyborgs: Science,technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s”.
  356. Agarwal, Bina. “Why do Women Need Independent Rights in Land?.
  357. 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?”).
  358. From Mary E. John,Womens’s Studies in India ,199.
  359. Razavi, Shahra “Globalization, Employment and Womens Empowerment”.
  360. Quoted in “Impact of Globalisation on Developing Countries and India” by Chandrasekaran Balakrishnan.

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