State-Backed Work Programmes and the Regendering of Work in Peru: Negotiating Femininity in ‘the Provinces’
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
- Vol. 31 (2) , 229-250
- https://doi.org/10.1068/a310229
Abstract
Typically research on employment and the negotiation of gender in Latin America has focused on private sector jobs in metropolitan urban centres. Two distinct groups of women have become the main focus of this research: single, young women tied into different manifestations of global production networks, and a second group who occupy different spaces within the so-called ‘informal sector’ (these women are often, although not exclusively female heads of households living in mctropolitan urban areas). This paper is an attempt to break with these traditions by suggesting that processes of globalisation and economic adjustment are not only manifest in the gendering of employment in export processing zones and/or informal sectors across the world but are also apparent in changes in public sector employment. I highlight the regendering of employment in the public sector in Latin America and focus on one new area of public sector work—the widespread implementation of state-backed work programmes. The analysis specifically focuses on women working in the Peruvian PAIT programme in the provincial town of Andahuaylas. It is argued that by looking at older, provincial, often married women, in ‘women-maintained households’ new light can be cast on the ways in which power relations and gender identities are negotiated via seemingly ordinary and gender-stereotyped activities. I examine processes of decisionmaking, budgeting, and the acquisition of skills, and focus on the relationship between Andean women's racialised and class-based identities. I trace the ways symbolic value and representation intertwine with material need to create positive environments for negotiation with male partners.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Negotiating Femininity: Women and representation in emergency employment in PeruGender, Place & Culture, 1997
- Voices and Visions from the Streets: Gender Interests and Political Participation among Women Informal Traders in Latin AmericaEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1995
- Gender and new regionalism in Latin America: Inclusion/exclusionThird World Quarterly, 1994
- Women Workers in Labour-Intensive Factories: The Case of Chile's Fish IndustryThe European Journal of Development Research, 1993
- The Fortunes of Adolescent Mothers and Their Children: The Transmission of Poverty in Santiago, ChilePopulation and Development Review, 1992
- On Thai Women in the International Division of LabourDevelopment and Change, 1992
- Industrial subcontracting and employment forms in Latin America: a framework for contextual analysisProgress in Human Geography, 1992
- EditorialIDS Bulletin, 1991
- Daughters, Decisions and Domination: An Empirical and Conceptual Critique of Household StrategiesDevelopment and Change, 1990
- Gender Relations, Peasant Livelihood Strategies and Migration: A Case Study from Cuzco, PeruBulletin of Latin American Research, 1986