Poverty, Female-Headed Households, and Sustainable Economic Development

Overview

This book examines female-headed households (FHHs) in the world economy, aspects of their poverty, and the implications of those for sustainable development. Following a general discussion of FHHs in the world community, the work discusses FHHs in two regions of India, one being an example of unsuccesssful development and the other of successful development. The research is based on fieldwork in five rural villages. One village, comprising mostly female-headed households, provided a unique case study. The other ...

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Overview

This book examines female-headed households (FHHs) in the world economy, aspects of their poverty, and the implications of those for sustainable development. Following a general discussion of FHHs in the world community, the work discusses FHHs in two regions of India, one being an example of unsuccesssful development and the other of successful development. The research is based on fieldwork in five rural villages. One village, comprising mostly female-headed households, provided a unique case study. The other four villages include both male- and female-headed households with a high proportion of female-headed households.

The authors found that female-headed households dominate the poorer sections of the community, and women's access to resources is limited by cultural, social, and economic influences. Women, particularly those in FHHs, bear the heaviest burdens in times of economic hardship. These women face more forms of discrimination outside the home than women from male-headed households. They have fewer customary rights but greater freedom of movement and more opportunities for paid employment. The authors go on to show that the benefits of government development programs have not reached remote areas. The trickle-down approach has not worked, but sustainable development programs focusing on women's development and self-responsiblity have helped to lift the economic status of women in general and FHHs in particular.

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Editorial Reviews

Booknews
The authors analyze a 1995 study of villages in rural West Bengal in order to address such topics as the effectiveness of trickle-down and sustainable rural development programs, the socioeconomic status of female-headed households, and the characteristics of poverty. They conclude that the best possible relief option is self-sufficiency incorporating the resources available to the community (in other words, sustainable development via the participatory approach), and they advocate informal and practical education directed at women. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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Product Details

Meet the Author

NERINA VECCHIO is a Teaching Fellow at Bond University and Senior teaching Fellow at Griffith University in Australia.

KARTIK C. ROY is Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Queensland in Australia and the current secretary general of the International Institute for Development Studies in India.

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Table of Contents

Illustrations
Preface
1 Female-Headed Households: A Worldwide Perspective 1
2 Status of Women in the Third World: Theoretical Perspective 9
3 Socioeconomic Status of Third World Women with Reference to Women in India 23
4 Women in West Bengal 41
5 Fieldwork Background 47
6 Basic Demographic Characteristics of Households 53
7 Income 69
8 Discrimination 81
9 Economic Stress and Survival Strategies 93
10 Sustainable Rural Development: Trickle-Down Method versus Participatory System 107
Selected Bibliography 119
Index 127
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