The Poverty-Purdah Trap in Rural Bangladesh: Implications for Women's Roles in the Family

The Poverty-Purdah Trap in Rural Bangladesh: Implications for Women's Roles in the Family

Author: 
Amin, Sajeda
Publisher: 
Blackwell Publishers Ltd
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Development and Change
Source: 
Development and Change, Vol. 28, Number 2, pp. 213-233, April 1997
Abstract: 

Trends in poverty, working through changing roles of women in income generation, have been advanced as one explanation of changing fertility in Bangladesh. This paper examines women's work patterns in two rural villages in northern Bangladesh and finds little evidence of increasing workforce participation, despite high contraceptive use rates. Observation of women's work patterns suggests that purdah, the practice of female seclusion, influences and conditions women's decisions regarding roles they assume, and remains a dominant influence in women's lives, showing little evidence of responsiveness to poverty.

Language: 

CITATION: Amin, Sajeda. The Poverty-Purdah Trap in Rural Bangladesh: Implications for Women's Roles in the Family . : Blackwell Publishers Ltd , . Development and Change, Vol. 28, Number 2, pp. 213-233, April 1997 - Available at: https://library.au.int/poverty-purdah-trap-rural-bangladesh-implications-womens-roles-family-3