Gendered livelihood strategies in rural South Africa and Appalachia

Type Working Paper - Regional Research Institute
Title Gendered livelihood strategies in rural South Africa and Appalachia
Author(s)
Issue 9814
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 1998
Page numbers 0-0
URL http://rri.wvu.edu/pdffiles/sedaag98.pdf
Abstract
This paper examines the contextual nature of gendered livelihood strategies through a comparative study of rural women's producer groups in former homelands of South Africa and Appalachia. This comparative approach situates gendered livelihood strategies in distinct local contexts that are constituted by specific historical dynamics and cultural relations. Producer groups are defined here as cooperatives, networks, and other collective economic activities that generate income for households and are part of community-based economic strategies. The discussion focuses on the link between socio-economic conditions and gendered livelihood strategies and the economic viability of these producer groups as sustainable income-generating activities, especially in rural areas. The comparison of production and marketing strategies of a sewing group in South Africa and a knitting group in Appalachia reveals similarities, yet important differences that derive from their specific historical and cultural contexts. In sum, this research advances knowledge of gender and rural development by comparing the gendered nature of collective economic strategies in two periperal regions of the so-called First and Third World.

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