Development, Labour Relations and Gender in Papua New Guinea

This paper examines the relationship between ‘subsistence’ production, simple commodity production and wage labour and the different effects this relationship has on males and females. The peri‐urban village of Siar, located a few kilometres north of Madang town in Papua New Guinea, is used as a cas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mankind 1986-08, Vol.16 (2), p.118-131
1. Verfasser: Fahey, Stephanie
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description This paper examines the relationship between ‘subsistence’ production, simple commodity production and wage labour and the different effects this relationship has on males and females. The peri‐urban village of Siar, located a few kilometres north of Madang town in Papua New Guinea, is used as a case study. It is argued that the village as a social group is dependent on wage labour for its reproduction and hence is proletarianized. As part of the proletarianization process, married women in the village have become doubly subordinated: to capital and to men.
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subjects Conservation of Natural Resources
Demography
Developing Countries
Economics
Employment
Environment
Ethnology
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Family Characteristics
Food production
Food Supply
Labour
Married women
Melanesia
Middle East
Morphological source materials
Oceania
Pacific Islands
Papua New Guinea
Papua New Guinea: Economic conditions
Papua New Guinea: Social conditions
Population
Population Characteristics
Prejudice
Rural Population
Salaries and Fringe Benefits
Sex role
Siar people (Papua New Guinea)
Social Problems
Socioeconomic Factors
Wages
Women's Rights
title Development, Labour Relations and Gender in Papua New Guinea
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