Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran: Microenterprise and the Informal Sector
Iran is estimated to have the third largest informal sector in the MENA region a major source of income for many low-income households whose numbers are growing as sanctions tighten. Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran provides insight into the role of informal networks in employment creation in Iran from a gender perspective. Drawing upon theories of social capital, social network, and the postcolonial feminist critique of mainstream development, this analysis sheds light on the ways in which poverty and unemployment may be tackled.
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Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran: Microenterprise and the Informal Sector
Iran is estimated to have the third largest informal sector in the MENA region a major source of income for many low-income households whose numbers are growing as sanctions tighten. Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran provides insight into the role of informal networks in employment creation in Iran from a gender perspective. Drawing upon theories of social capital, social network, and the postcolonial feminist critique of mainstream development, this analysis sheds light on the ways in which poverty and unemployment may be tackled.
109.99 In Stock
Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran: Microenterprise and the Informal Sector

Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran: Microenterprise and the Informal Sector

by R. Bahramitash
Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran: Microenterprise and the Informal Sector

Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran: Microenterprise and the Informal Sector

by R. Bahramitash

Paperback(1st ed. 2013)

$109.99 
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Overview

Iran is estimated to have the third largest informal sector in the MENA region a major source of income for many low-income households whose numbers are growing as sanctions tighten. Gender and Entrepreneurship in Iran provides insight into the role of informal networks in employment creation in Iran from a gender perspective. Drawing upon theories of social capital, social network, and the postcolonial feminist critique of mainstream development, this analysis sheds light on the ways in which poverty and unemployment may be tackled.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781349465415
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan US
Publication date: 12/10/2015
Edition description: 1st ed. 2013
Pages: 223
Product dimensions: 5.51(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Roksana Bahramitash is Visiting Scholar at the University of Montreal, Canada, with the Canada Research Chair of Islam, Pluralism and Globalization. She is a sociologist who earned her PhD from McGill University and has focused on social justice and poverty from a gender perspective. She previously worked as Faculty Lecturer on 'Women in the Muslim World' at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Concordia University, Canada, as well as other courses at McGill University, Canada. Originally from Iran, she was active after the Iranian Revolution in literacy projects among peasant women.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Social Capital, Social Net Work and Micro Enterprise 2. Women and the Informal Economy: A Literature Review 3. Women's Employment in Iran: An Overview 4. Gender and Informal Economy in Iran: A Review of Previous work 5. Field Work: Female Workers 6. Field Work: Male Workers: Comparing the Two Sample (Male with Female) Conclusion
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