Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe

<p>This research asks whether the patterns of women's economic contribution and marginalization that previously have been identified apply to the emerging metropolitan fringe areas. I argue that women in metropolitan fringe communities are more marginalized than men in tenns of type of...

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Main Author: Martell, Christine Renée
Other Authors: Urban and Regional Planning
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41400
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03042009-040557/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-414002021-05-26T05:48:28Z Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe Martell, Christine Renée Urban and Regional Planning Hardman, Anna M. Bohland, James R. Ritzdorf, Marsha Thailand economic marginalization LD5655.V855 1995.M378 <p>This research asks whether the patterns of women's economic contribution and marginalization that previously have been identified apply to the emerging metropolitan fringe areas. I argue that women in metropolitan fringe communities are more marginalized than men in tenns of type of employment, location of employment, hours of employment, and remuneration. Women contribute different amounts and proportions of time and income to the family than men and their contributions, productive and reproductive, significantly add to the household resources and are necessary for household survival. The research identifies women's economic contributions to the household and how they vary by household type and composition. This study uses data collected by Browder et al (1992) from a sample offamilies in Bangkok's metropolitan fringe to explore employment patterns and gender roles. Results show that women and men have different employment patterns~ with women much more likely to be involved with infonnal, self-employed work. Women make significant contributions to household incomes, but they do so while being economically marginalized. Even in a lower-middle to middle class area, residents--particularly women--rely on infonnal sector employment. An important conclusion, which was overlooked in a previous analysis, is that self employment is crucial to women's work patterns. Finally, all women significantly contribute to household income; unlike non-head males, non-head and non-spouse females contribute as much as female heads and spouses.</p> Master of Urban and Regional Planning 2014-03-14T21:30:51Z 2014-03-14T21:30:51Z 1995 2009-03-04 2009-03-04 2009-03-04 Thesis Text etd-03042009-040557 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41400 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03042009-040557/ en OCLC# 34295636 LD5655.V855_1995.M378.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vi, 101 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Thailand
economic marginalization
LD5655.V855 1995.M378
spellingShingle Thailand
economic marginalization
LD5655.V855 1995.M378
Martell, Christine Renée
Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe
description <p>This research asks whether the patterns of women's economic contribution and marginalization that previously have been identified apply to the emerging metropolitan fringe areas. I argue that women in metropolitan fringe communities are more marginalized than men in tenns of type of employment, location of employment, hours of employment, and remuneration. Women contribute different amounts and proportions of time and income to the family than men and their contributions, productive and reproductive, significantly add to the household resources and are necessary for household survival. The research identifies women's economic contributions to the household and how they vary by household type and composition. This study uses data collected by Browder et al (1992) from a sample offamilies in Bangkok's metropolitan fringe to explore employment patterns and gender roles. Results show that women and men have different employment patterns~ with women much more likely to be involved with infonnal, self-employed work. Women make significant contributions to household incomes, but they do so while being economically marginalized. Even in a lower-middle to middle class area, residents--particularly women--rely on infonnal sector employment. An important conclusion, which was overlooked in a previous analysis, is that self employment is crucial to women's work patterns. Finally, all women significantly contribute to household income; unlike non-head males, non-head and non-spouse females contribute as much as female heads and spouses.</p> === Master of Urban and Regional Planning
author2 Urban and Regional Planning
author_facet Urban and Regional Planning
Martell, Christine Renée
author Martell, Christine Renée
author_sort Martell, Christine Renée
title Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe
title_short Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe
title_full Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe
title_fullStr Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe
title_full_unstemmed Women's work and household income: evidence from Bangkok's urban fringe
title_sort women's work and household income: evidence from bangkok's urban fringe
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41400
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03042009-040557/
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