Women's Employment and Its Impact on Life in a Fijian Village

Type Book
Title Women's Employment and Its Impact on Life in a Fijian Village
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 1999
Publisher Farm and Horticultural Management Group Lincoln University
City Canterbury
Country/State NEW ZEALAND
URL http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.524.1805&rep=rep1&type=pdf
Abstract
Men have often been significant beneficiaries of development interventions. This has stemmed
from increasing the economic strength of the target population. In the 1990's there has been a
shift by development agencies to a more equitable focus where a better quality of life for
everyone in a household is more often the target.
Because men have predominantly held the recognised income earning role in the household,
increases in employment opportunities resulting from development intervention tend to leave
women to take on the work previously carried out by the men. This increases an already heavy
workload for women.
The village of Natokalau, on the island of Ovalau in Fiji, is faced with a different situation.
Here, many of the women have gained employment in a fish canning factory. This leaves some
of the household and child-care duties formerly carried out by the women to the men of the
village. This study reports on the results of studying this village to ascertain the effects of
womens' employment.

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