Negotiating Marriage, Family and Work

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A01=Dahlia Roque
Arab
Author_Dahlia Roque
Category=JBSF1
Category=JHBK
class
Commerce Graduate
Dahlia Tawhid Roque
domestic labour
domestic labour division
education
educational attainment
Egypt
Egypt's Labour Market
Egypt's Private Sector
Egyptian Adolescents
Egyptian Females
Egyptian Personal Status Laws
Egyptian Women
Egyptian women's employment
Egypt’s Labour Market
Egypt’s Private Sector
employment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
family
family care
Female Labour Market Participation Rates
gender
gender role negotiation
higher education gender gap
International Labour Organization Decent Work
Labour Market Engagement
lives
marriage
Married Middle Class Women
Married Woman
MENA Country
MENA Region
middle class
Middle East
middle-class Egyptian women
middle-class women's economic strategies
negotiating
OECD Family Database
paid work
Public Higher Institutions
qualitative ethnography
revolution
social mobility Egypt
Spouse Selection
spouse selection and marriage
Traditional Sexual Division
urban
women
Women's Low Labour
Women's Reproductive Roles
Women’s Low Labour
Women’s Reproductive Roles
work
World Development Report
Young Female Graduates
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367726812
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Caught between two worlds of social transition and modern progression, young women in the Middle East have for some time been forging means to balance conventional gender roles and marriage expectations, while also advancing their position in society through improved legal status, health and educational attainment. Yet, with half of Egypt’s university-educated women out of the labour market and not seeking work, this study reveals why middle-class women continue to pursue a degree that they fail to use. This book sheds light onto the lives of highly educated middle-class Egyptian women, where they share their stories of spouse selection and marriage, and how education, wealth and unyielding gender roles influence their employment status. Through qualitative ethnography, Negotiating Marriage, Family and Work gives voice to young Egyptian women, both married and single, presenting their self-perceptions, their roles as mothers and wives, and their agency. Carried out from the time of the Arab Spring, this research uncovers the key strategies that middle-class women employ to secure their economic well-being in their marital and domestic contexts, as well as the barriers that married women face in combining paid work and family care.

Dahlia Tawhid Roque holds a PhD in Gender Studies from Monash University, Australia, and an MA in Middle East Studies from The American University in Cairo. Her research activities relate to employment, development and gender in the Middle East and North Africa, and she advises intergovernmental organisations on programme and policy development supporting women and youth employment.

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