Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
- 1 Why Country People are not Peasants
- 2 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
- 3 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 2. The Poor Quality of Official Statistics
- 4 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 3. Historicist Fallacies
- 5 Pause: How can the Impasse be Resolved?
- 6 The Logical Necessity for Economic Inequality within Rural Communities
- 7 The Farming Household: its Defects as a Statistical Unit
- 8 The Need to be Indebted
- 9 The Flexibility of Inheritance Systems
- 10 The Neglect of Farm-Labouring Systems
- 11 Misconceptions about Migration
- 12 The Neglect of Women
- 13 The Sale of Farmland
- 14 Rural Class Stratification?
- Postscript Doomsday Economics
- Glossary and Place Names
- References
- Index
12 - The Neglect of Women
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Preamble How the Farmers Outwitted the Bureaucrats: A True Tale
- 1 Why Country People are not Peasants
- 2 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 1. The Relevance of Economic Inequality
- 3 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 2. The Poor Quality of Official Statistics
- 4 The Vain Search for Universal Generalizations: 3. Historicist Fallacies
- 5 Pause: How can the Impasse be Resolved?
- 6 The Logical Necessity for Economic Inequality within Rural Communities
- 7 The Farming Household: its Defects as a Statistical Unit
- 8 The Need to be Indebted
- 9 The Flexibility of Inheritance Systems
- 10 The Neglect of Farm-Labouring Systems
- 11 Misconceptions about Migration
- 12 The Neglect of Women
- 13 The Sale of Farmland
- 14 Rural Class Stratification?
- Postscript Doomsday Economics
- Glossary and Place Names
- References
- Index
Summary
Even before the rise of the feminist movement, anthropologists and sociologists had become ashamed of their neglect of the significance of women's work – of their inherent male bias. So a fair number of compilations resembling the pioneering Women of Tropical Africa have appeared in the past couple of decades and more anthropologists, especially women, have concentrated their research efforts on women's roles or ‘problems’, producing numerous chapters and doctoral theses with such titles as ‘Changing Sex Roles and Social Tensions in …’ – though few to such good effect as Phyllis Kaberry in Women of the Grassfields, or Mary Smith in Baba of Karo.
Following Ardener's Perceiving Women (1975), two of the most modern types of approach are perhaps best exemplified by an admirable socialist debate on feminism in Africa edited by Pepe Roberts (1984) and by a much more sober compilation Female and Male in West Africa which tries to ‘look at men's and women's behaviour symmetrically’, realizing that they have ‘similar potential abilities and patterns of responses to incentives.’ As for India, general books, such as The Position of Women in Hindu Civilization and Marriage and Family in India are found in every serious bookshop there; a National Committee on the Status of Women reported in 1975; and Leela Gulati's Profiles in Female Poverty (1981) is touchingly immediate in its detail.
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- Information
- Development Economics on TrialThe Anthropological Case for a Prosecution, pp. 140 - 145Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986